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Vietnam’s textile and apparel exports to decline 18 per cent: Vinatex
Vietnam’s textile and apparel exports in the second half of the year is poised to decline 18 per cent with total exports declining by 16 per cent year-on-year to reach approximately $32.75 billion, says Vietnam National Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex). According to a report released by the Ministry of Industry and Trade, textile and garment production in Vietnam increased by 7 per cent in July and by 1.8 per cent throughout the first seven months of the year. However, the epidemic caused numerous difficulties for textile and garment production, in addition to exports, largely due to a drop in export orders.
In July, local textile enterprises did not receive any orders for high-value products such as suits and high-end shirts during the previous two quarters. Moreover, the country’s production of medical masks and protective gear, goods that provided jobs for many garment businesses in the second quarter, declined due to an oversupply worldwide.
To make up for export order shortage, textile enterprises must exploit the domestic market. They should minimize the decline in sales and profits by managing production costs, maintaining product quality, and rearranging their production forces. Furthermore, they should identify their key workforce to maintain employment levels and income
Vietnam, EU approve EVFTA
The European Union Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) was approved on August 1 paving the way for increased trade between the EU and Vietnam. As per the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI), the EVFTA is expected to help increase Vietnam’s GDP 4.6 per cent and exports to the EU 42.7 per cent by 2025. Analysts expect the trade deal to give a much-needed boost to Vietnam’s industries, such as manufacturing, as it looks to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The agreement will eliminate 65 per cent duties on EU exports to Vietnam while the remaining will be gradually phased out over a period of 10 years. The agreement will also eliminate 71 per cent duties on Vietnam exports to the EU, with the remaining being eliminated over a period of seven years. The EVFTA also contains important provisions for intellectual property (IP) rights, investment liberalization, and sustainable development. This includes a commitment to implement the International Labor Organization (ILO) standards and the UN Convention on Climate Change.
The EVFTA aims to liberalize both tariff and non-tariff barriers for key imports on both sides over a period of 10 years. For Vietnam, tariff elimination will benefit key export industries, including the manufacturing of smartphones and electronic products, textiles, footwear and agricultural products, such as coffee. These industries are also very labor-intensive. Increasing Vietnam’s export volume to the EU, the FTA will facilitate the expansion of these industries, both in terms of capital and increasing employment.
First digital Helsinki Fashion Week features 3D fashion films and livestreams
Helsinki Fashion Week’s first purely digital and sustainable showcase via the “cyberspace utopia” platform Digital Village, enabled viewers to watch 3-D fashion films and livestreamings from around the globe. Around 31 designers presented their new collections over the week, and 15 of them were paired with 3-D designers months ahead of time to digitize their latest collections via HFW’s “Keeping Up With the Kardashians”- or “Big Brother”-style designer residency program, according to Evelyn Mora, founder of Helsinki Fashion Week.
Each video showcased a handful of looks from designers selected from around the world. Models’ faces, which were 3-D scanned from humans, may look a bit scary, but the details of the garments and the movements on the bodies were well executed. The show allowed designers to pick and choose the wildest settings to present their work in, instead of a blank runway. For example, Patrick McDowell’s runway was a protester’s heaven, where statues of angels were sprayed with graffiti. Nece Gene’s show took place on the surface of a deserted planet. AVTR’s new collection was presented on a chessboard, with dance and battle performances.
With the help of its blockchain partner LUKSO, Helsinki Fashion Week also launched a 3-D online store. The store houses virtual looks and garments of selected participating designers, It allows users to claim 3-D clothes and purchase the service of digitally wearing the garments.
Helsinki Fashion Week is expected to release a digital sustainability report later this month with Normative, a Swedish auditing company, to measure the environmental impact of its digital showcase compared with previous physical editions.
COVID-19 harsh on apparel sector as sales plummet: FTI survey
As per FTI Consultings’s Trends in the Apparel Sector survey, the economic catastrophe spurred by COVID-19 was particularly harsh on the apparel industry. With the entire world practicing self-distancing, governments across the US deeming apparel as ‘non-essential’ business, retailers saw their sales plummet. Around 36 per cent of the 1,000 consumers surveyed said support of COVID-19 victims and frontline workers influenced their brand loyalty. Nearly the same number of respondents reported being influenced by great prices.
Price and value drove the majority of customers to switch brands. Around 29 percent respondents switched brands during COVID-19 due to the product’s price and value factors. Around 54 per cent reported missing brick and mortar stores for the touch feel and see factor they offered. However, these consumers also highlighted the convenience of online purchasing and preference for contactless purchase/concerns about hygiene as being the core drivers for customers not looking to return to stores.
According to these respondents, online apparel sales are projected to cannibalize about 7 to 10 per cent of store sales. They advised retailers to improve distribution channels and automation to meet this demand. Retailers should also conduct a holistic review of their store portfolios to identify what store closures are necessary for long-term survival. One-third of consumers reported being excited to return to stores for the tactile experience of shopping, such as trying on clothes and leaving with new purchases in hand.
AEPC hails increase in ECLGS limits
AEPC has hailed the government’s decision to raise exporters’ ceiling limit – both – liability and turnover – for availing the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee scheme (ECLGS). Many MSMEs earlier criticized the scheme for granting insufficient funds of Rs 3-lakh-crore for thousands of micro units in the country. But on July 29, member lending institution sanctioned a sum of Rs 136,155 crore for the scheme, of which Rs 87,277 crore has been disbursed.
The government has also decided to include individual loans given for business purpose within the ambit of ECLGS increasing the earlier liability ceiling from Rs 25 crore to Rs 50 crore and annual turnover from Rs 100 crore to Rs 250 crore. AEPC has sought a further increase in the liability limit up to Rs 100 crore and removal of the turnover limit as under the new classification export turnover would not be counted for MSMEs.
CD8 to collaborate with American Group for Brooks Brothers’ acquisition
Investors group Club Deal 8 (CD8), which aims to buy American retailer Brooks Brothers, plans to collaborate with an American Group to support its strategies for the acquisition of the Black Label. Brooks Brothers has obtained $80 million in debtor-in-possession financing from ABG-BB LLC, a partnership between Authentic Brands Group LLC and Simon Property Group Inc. ABG is open to working with the Italian group, although any partnership would most likely involve a licensing arrangement rather than a co-ownership deal.
Last month, Brooks Brothers filed a motion in the US Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware to obtain court approval of an asset purchase agreement with Sparc Group LLC, a company backed by ABG with Simon Property Group. The CD8 offer will stand on three pillars: sustainability; a lower number of stores compared to the 125 proposed by Authentic Brands Group, which has stepped forward with a $305 million stalking-horse bid to purchase Brooks Brothers, and a greater emphasis on the online channel.
CD8 investors include Alessandro Giglio, President, Giglio Group; the Biella-based Gruppo Verzoletto; Brando Crespi, Founder, Pro-Natura; legal manager Lorenza Morello, and Studio Dentons as an adviser.
COVID-19 to result in $95.4 billion loss of apparel and footwear sales: GlobalData
Analytics firm GlobalData expects the pandemic to cost the apparel and footwear industries across the Asia-Pacific region $95.4 billion in lost sales this year. The global industry will lose $395.6 billion in sales, which represents a 19.5-per-cent decline on last year’s figures. The sector will account for 29.1 per cent of the total $1.3617 trillion impact of lost revenues by the retail industry during the period.
According to research, 60 per cent consumers noted trustworthiness, risk-free and familiarity as being the major factors currently influencing their choices of products/services. To increase sales, brands should continuously engage with consumers through social-media channels and personalized messages said Vijay Bhupathiraju, Retail Analyst, GlobalData. They should build trust by delivering messages addressing CO VID-19 and social responsibility and advertise the safety and hygiene measures taken during the manufacturing process and in-stores to drive more consumers to the stores.
Calik Denim reschedules Amsterdam Conference
Travel restrictions and safety concerns about the COVID-19 have forced Turkish denim mill Calik Denim to reschedule its third annual Ever Evolving Talks event in Amsterdam to April 2021. The conference was scheduled to take place the day before Kingpins Amsterdam in October, which announced last week its plans to cancel the trade show as well.
Calik Denim launched the annual conference in 2018 as a catalyst for change for the fashion industry as a whole. The first event focused on innovation, technology and sustainability. The second event dove deeper into topics like blockchain, Gen Z consumption habits and climate change.
Based on the company’s motto ‘Ever Evolving,’ which emphasizes continuous development, the Ever Evolving Talks by Calik Denim event is intended to bring industry stakeholders together and support their collective development.
RFID Lab completes Chain Integration Project
The Auburn University RFID Lab, GS1 US and several leading retail companies have completed the Chain Integration Project (CHIP). The groundbreaking proof-of-concept demonstrated the effectiveness of using blockchain in combination with RFID to gather serialized product information. Three brands, Nike, PVH Corp., and Herman Kay, as well as two retailers, Kohl’s and Macy’s, contributed live data to the project. Though blockchain’s potential is still undefined in retail, CHIP represented an important step in helping to solve supply chain challenges that have plagued the industry for decades.
CHIP participants named claims and chargebacks as one of the costliest problems for brands and retailers. There's simply little to no communication of serialized data between the stakeholders involved. Claims are often settled in the absence of sufficient shipment information on both brand and retailer sides.
Though blockchain technology can hold them accountable for their agreements and create more order transparency, trading partners need to focus on the basic tenets of supply chain visibility to fully maximize blockchain for this purpose. Companies pursuing blockchain should have globally unique product identification in place (not proprietary identification numbers) as well as a uniform way to capture how the product changes hands throughout the supply chain, such as RFID. Without supply chain visibility and data completeness, order accuracy cannot be improved.
India’s Cotton textile exports to China decline by 74%: TEXPROCIL
Data by The Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council (TEXPROCIL) reveals, India’s textile exports to China declined by 74 per cent to touch $90 million during the April-June quarter this year. China’s share in India’s total exports of cotton textile products also halved to 6.9 per cent during the quarter as against 14 per cent in the corresponding quarter last fiscal.
This decline is a result of reciprocal measures carried out by Indian and Chinese governments such as detailed shipment inspections at ports, delaying clearing of goods, thereby also contributing to decline in exports, says KV Srinivasan, Managing Director, Premier Mills. Substitution of textile imports from China as well as contemplation of anti-dumping duties on certain Chinese products may further impact these imports, he said.
Overall, India’s cotton textile exports during the first quarter declined by 47 per cent to $1.29 billion against $2.42 billion in the same quarter last year. One of the main reasons for the decline was supply chain disruptions. Delays in documentation, especially Certificates of Origin in countries like China, Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia also delayed deliveries, hitting exports, said Siddhartha Rajagopal, Executive Director, TEXPROCIL.












