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Bangladesh senses more US orders due to tariff war
Because of the US-China trade war, Bangladesh-based garment manufacturers have an opportunity to sell in the US. Bangladesh has seen the value of its overseas sales rise. For the first time in 30 years, Newage Group, a Bangladesh-based garment manufacturer, is sensing an opportunity to sell in the US and has been getting enquiries from Macy’s and Gap. The Viyellatex Group, also from Bangladesh, forecasts its annual exports to the US to more than double, buoyed by rising orders. About 30 per cent of Viyellatex’s clients are from the US, compared with 20 per cent a year ago.
But for Bangladesh-based companies there’s a roadblock to winning more orders from western firms. Bangladesh needs to improve its supply chain, modernize its garment factories, build highways and reduce red tape at ports to lure more buyers. It takes 168 hours for exporters in the nation to ship from Dhaka, while it takes just 23 hours in Shanghai.
Bangladesh is the world’s second largest garment exporter. The country aims at doubling total exports by 2024. Its economy is expected to expand at a record eight per cent for the next two years. Bangladesh’s garment industry, which employs four million people, accounts for 13 per cent of the gross domestic product.
Archroma launches Foron dyes for sportswear and active wear
Archroma has launched Foron SP-WF, a range of high wet-fast disperse dyes for sportswear and active wear applications.
The dyes are especially suited for the coloration of polyester fibers and microfibers, and polyester/elastane blends, in exhaustion applications. The Foron SP-WF range which includes primary and ternary color grades has been developed to fulfill the high color wet fastness and performance requirements of sportswear manufacturers and brands. The core ternary color grades enable deep shades at lower dyeing temperatures on sensitive polyester/elastane fabrics without causing excessive fiber damage, saving energy resources and meeting the high fastness demand of leading companies. Consumers want deep color that stays put on the fiber and brands are defining their requirements accordingly. With Foron SP-WF, Archroma offers manufacturers of sportswear textiles a solution that combines high levels of wet fastness with high productivity and low resource consumption.
The product is at the core of Archroma’s Fast Sport, a coloration system for polyester knitted sportswear, providing the best fastness in the shortest possible time with a reduced environmental footprint. By using these dyes, manufacturers can significantly reduce their consumption of time, energy, chemical, and water, as well as their CO2 emissions. Archroma, a leader in color and specialty chemicals, believes it is possible to make the textile industry sustainable, economically and ecologically.
US makes up just two per cent of global apparel industry
The US sewn products sector is struggling. The industry experienced substantial blow as engineering, operating and mechanical jobs were moved overseas. The past 30 years continued to see a downward trajectory for domestic manufacturing in the apparel and sewn products industry, and by 2010 only two per cent of the world’s apparel was made in the United States.
In the 1960s, the average household spent more than 10 per cent of their annual income on apparels. This total represented a low number of high-quality goods, 95 per cent of which were manufactured and sold in the United States. By the 1980s and ’90s, the pendulum swung, and the desire for high-quality products was trumped by a need for more—more clothes, more shoes, more things—at a lower cost.
When the industry packed its bags and moved abroad years ago, it left behind the notion that a career in domestic manufacturing was a thing of the past. As years went by, a generational gap in skill sets grew. Training programs and technical education diminished and a career in manufacturing came with a tarnished reputation. The introduction of automation, though effective, presented another challenge as machines began to replace people along the assembly line.
Mud Jeans plans 100 per cent recycled denim
Mud Jeans, the Dutch brand will launch 100 per cent recycled denim jeans next year. The brand currently uses 40 per cent recycled cotton for its jeans production. While it usually takes around 7,000 liters of water to produce one pair of jeans, Mud Jeans uses 1,500 liters of water to produce one pair of jeans. In 2013, Mud Jeans introduced Lease a Jeans, where consumers can not only buy the brand’s jeans, but can lease them as well. The main objective of the initiative is to help the brand keep track of where their resources and products are. In addition to this, customers receive a discount if they return their old jeans to the brand. The brand sources its recycled material to produce new jeans through a variety of methods. Consumers can send their old jeans through the post via a free label from Mud Jeans. Retailers can also participate in a take-back scheme. All in all, Mud Jeans collects jeans that consist of more than 95 per cent cotton and sends them to a Spain-based recycling facility. These jeans are shredded and mixed with new yarn to make new jeans.
Mud Jeans is currently being sold in 29 countries through 300 retailers across Germany and the Netherlands.
Levi Strauss half yearly revenue up six per cent
Levi Strauss revenue grew six per cent in the first half of the year. Net revenue rose five per cent. Sales at its China unit rose three per cent. Selling, general and administrative expenses rose about seven per cent mainly due to higher advertising and marketing costs. Net income attributable to the company fell, hit primarily by costs related to its initial public offering earlier this year.
An ongoing weakness in the retail sector weighed on its US wholesale business, which reported a two per cent drop in sales. Globally, the business accounts for a third of Levi’s revenue. The company expects its wholesale business in the US to be challenged in the second half of the year with bankruptcies and door closures and tightening of customers open-to-buy budgets. To counter the weakness in its wholesale unit, the company has been investing in its online business and retail outlets, while expanding its presence in markets such as China, India and Brazil. The efforts helped raise sales across segments in the second quarter, with its women’s business growing 16 per cent and tops segment rising 14 per cent.
The company has forecast full-year net revenue growth at the high end of the mid-single-digit range.
Iran aims to boost apparel at trade with border countries
Iran wants to boost garment output and exports. Domestic units supply 70 to 80 per cent of the requirement for clothing inside the country. After the ban imposed on imports of clothing, domestic units are making all endeavors to boost the quality and quantity of their products. Garments exports are planned especially to Afghanistan, Iraq, Russia and Yemen.
Iran shares a border with the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Russia, Oman, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Kuwait, Qatar, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia. The value of Iran’s trade with neighboring countries in the past Iranian calendar year was about 41 per cent of the country’s total non-oil trade in the mentioned time span. Increasing non-oil exports to neighboring countries is another plan. Some of the areas worked on include home appliances, petrochemicals, and marine industries, basic metals such as steel, aluminum and copper as well as agriculture.
Fifteen mega export projects will be launched to identify target markets. A comprehensive system will be launched for registration of domestically-made products in the near future. This transparent mechanism will lay the ground for introducing different industries and industrial capabilities aiming to strengthen domestic production. Iran has named this year as the year of pickup in production.
DTG printing systems gain traction
With the rise of textile printing, direct-to-garment (DTG) printing systems are gaining traction in the market. One of the stand-out names not only in DTG but in the global printing market is Ricoh. Ricoh regularly invests in innovative solutions for print service providers. The Ri 1000 is the latest DTG printer from Ricoh. It prints full-color graphics on garments of a diverse array of sizes, colors and materials. Quick-change magnetic platens, available in multiple styles and sizes, provide a variety of print options. All Ricoh Ri 1000 platens are pre-prepared to provide users with hassle free loading and garment protection. Additional benefits include durable steel construction. The printer’s special carriage and table design helps keep garments flat and in place, even while printing at speeds of up to 28 seconds.
Another leading brand in DTG technology is Epson. The SC-F2100 from Epson is capable of producing high-quality full color prints on a range of items. It offers new features such as improved speed and reliability and the ability to create customised print designs. The SC-F2100 is aimed at anyone who wants to add DTG printing to their services, namely production T-shirt printers, online T-shirt retailers, high and low-volume print companies, as well as corporates who want to produce their own branded work wear or promotional items.
India frets over garment imports from Bangladesh
Garments from Bangladesh are flooding India. Bangladesh sources fabrics duty-free from China and exports garments to India. This huge jump in garment imports from Bangladesh under the free trade agreement has put India’s domestic industry in a fix. This comes amid slowing domestic demand and banks curtailing credit to 80 per cent of micro, small and medium enterprises in the sector. Import of garments from Bangladesh was up 82 per cent in the last fiscal. It has been growing steadily at a compounded annual growth rate of 52 per cent. This is feared to render about ten lakh people jobless with most small garment units shutting shop. India’s garment exports fell four per cent in the last fiscal. However, they have revived partially in the last two months with the export incentive schemes.
The Indian textile industry feels Bangladesh has to be compelled to source a part of its fabrics requirement from India as putting a cap on exports from Bangladesh looks difficult. Bangladesh, which is the world’s second-largest garment exporter, has seen the value of its overseas sales rise. It aims at doubling its exports by 2024. Its economy is expected to expand by a record eight per cent for the next two years.
Bangladesh exports to the US up 14 per cent
This fiscal year, Bangladesh’s exports to the US rose by 14.92 per cent. Earnings from apparel exports to the US grew 14.60 per cent over the previous year’s earnings.
Exports to Germany were up 4.79 per cent. Germany imports 15.23 per cent of Bangladesh’s total exports. Export earnings from the UK rose by 4.51 per cent, which is 10.29 per cent of the total exports of Bangladesh. The lion’s share of Bangladesh’s exports is limited to 10 countries viz: US, Germany, the United Kingdom, Spain, France, Italy, Canada, Japan, the Netherlands and Poland. The 10 countries import over 71 per cent of Bangladesh’s total exports.
Bangladesh is trying to reduce dependency on a few markets and diversify export destinations. The efforts are succeeding. Once, 65 per cent of Bangladesh’s total exports were limited to the US. That is now 17 per cent. Bilateral trade agreements are seen as a way to avail of duty-free market access to new countries such as the Russian federation and South Africa. Bangladesh provides a four per cent cash incentive against exports of apparel goods to non-traditional export markets. This is in addition to the one per cent incentive for all traditional export destinations.
Surat upset over petrol cess
The road and infrastructure cess on petrol and diesel has not gone down well with those associated with Surat’s Rs 80,000 crore textile industry. Textile traders say transport costs at every stage, right from bringing the raw material, sending the grey fabric to process houses and sending the finished goods to the market, would become more expensive as petrol and diesel prices have already gone up.
The textile industry in Surat is also disappointed the reverse charge mechanism (RCM) is still in force. The industry blames RCM for the prolonged money circulation cycle and the shortage of finance. In the textile value chain businessmen are required to do cash transactions at various stages, but subject to a limit of Rs 10,000 a day. They have demanded an increase in the limit up to at least Rs 25,000 a day. The textile industry was also pitching for scrapping GST for those units whose turnover is below Rs 5 crores. At present, the limit is Rs 50 lakhs.
Surat is the hub of manmade fabric in the country. There are seven lakh power looms in Surat. The annual turnover of the textile industry in Surat is pegged at around Rs 80,000 crores.












