FW
Moda at Spring Fair reports record-breaking orders
Ultimate fashion destination at Spring Fair, Moda has reported record-breaking orders and exhibitors experiencing their best trade show for years, with brands who participated in the Moda Catwalk seeing an immediate increase in orders. Hundreds of new season’s collections and must-have looks from womenswear, accessory, jewellery, and footwear designers and brands are being showcased over four days at the NEC Birmingham with retailers including Pamela Shiffer, Gormley Shoes, Lovely Looks, J Shoes, Goody2Shoes, Houstons Footwear, GASP, Russells of Omagh, Cordners, Boardwalk, Charles Ager Ltd, Greenes Shoes, Donaghy's, Anthony Ryan, Charles Ashley, The Rose Hanger, Hamish Munro, Wilkies, McElhinneys Department Store, Maddie& Marks, House of Bruar, Hoopers, Twinkle Toes, Hoggs of Fife, Snapdragon, MGO Leisurewear, The Children's Shoe Company, Precious Soles, etc.
Moda at Spring Fair is being held from February 06-09, 2022 at NEC Birmingham. Spring Fair is the UK’s most vibrant marketplace for wholesale home, gift, and fashion. As the definitive "shop for shops", it supports the retail industry like no other.
Located in the centre of the UK at the NEC in Birmingham, Spring Fair is easily accessible for UK and International retailers to meet every February, at the very start of the buying season. Together with a comprehensive line up of exciting exhibitors it offers a vibrant hub where not only ideas flourish but community, connection and collaboration thrives.
Bemberg by Asahi Kasei showcases Ecoalf’s FW21 collection at Première Vision
At Première Vision,Bemberg™ by Asahi Kasei showcased its latest Ecoalf’s FW21 collection, which perfectly embodies its values of preciousness, quality and refined aesthetic blended with innovation and responsible values.
The visionary Bemberg™ brand is renowned for its eco-high-tech yarns which are able to inject sustainability into premium textiles and are designed to match all styles and uses. Bemberg™’ is cool and sensual with a unique, supple drape. It is extremely antistatic and breathable, while its soft versatility makes it perfect for The Modern Wardrobe fashions, athleisure and everyday casual wear.
The Parisian exhibition completes the company’s celebrative two-chapter journey. The first half was presented during PittiUomo, where Bemberg™ showed archival suits crafted by the historic SartoriaLitrico and lined in Cupro. Behind them stood the new visual image of Bemberg™, focused on exceptional beauty, one-of-a-kind uniqueness and joyful comfort.
Spring Fair reopens after a two-year gap
Thousands of retail buyers, and owners of independent stores from across the UK flocked to Spring Fair at the NEC Birmingham as it opened its doors for the first time in two years. Open until Wednesday February 09, the show is expected to generate tens of millions of pounds worth of business, refuelling the retail industry and injecting newness.
Moda settled beautifully into its new home as the Fashion destination at Spring Fair, offering retailers the most diverse fashion buying destination in the UK with a comprehensive and inspiring line-up of industry leading womenswear, jewellery, accessories, footwear, and sustainable brands. Jewellery& Watch had its own distinct edit within Moda giving fashion and jewellery buyers the chance to see the widest collection of new season pieces across a wide variety of price points and explore crossover buying opportunities – all in the one location.
On the Inspiring Retail Stage, visitors were encouraged to hear from Karl McKeever, Founder of FutureView, about the opportunities that have arisen as a result of Covid, with many businesses unlearning and relearning behaviours, developing different ways of thinking and doing things, and becoming increasingly creative and collaborative in the process. Interior designer and finalist of TV show Interior Design Masters, Paul Moneypenny discussed his love of design, how to be brave with colour.
Kenya’s records Sh8 billion rise in textile and apparel accessories’ earnings
Boosted by higher sales to the US and the Netherlands, Kenya’s earnings from textile and apparel accessories grew Sh8 billion in the nine months to September 2021. As per Kenya Export Promotion and Branding Agency (Keproba) stats, textile firm’s revenues rose 31.1 per cent to Sh33.7 billion in the review period compared to Sh25.7 billion a year earlier. The US and The Netherlands were Kenya‘s largest export markets during the period, says Wilfred Marube, CEO, Keproba.
FTA with the US, and African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) allows Kenya to export selected goods at preferential terms to the US, exempting them from paying tax. The initiative allows Kenya to export more than 6,000 product lines, which is mostly dominated by the export of textile and apparel. Locally, the revival of Rivatex also boosts Kenya’s textile sector by creating a demand for locally produced cotton and created thousands of jobs.
Likewise, the introduction of Bacillus Thuringiensis cotton, Kenya’s first genetically modified, insect-resistant cotton seeds, boosts cotton farming in the country. Keproba supports the sector by partnering with its key stakeholders including business membership organizations (BMOs) like Kenya Fashion Council to maintain high production standards and create value-added products that meet the global export market standards, adds Marube.
The agency recently developed a new strategy to increase uptake of locally designed and manufactured apparel, textiles, leather and accessories including through the ‘Buy Kenya Build Kenya’ campaign.
Malaysia’s Caely Holdings Bhd to boost lingerie production in Indonesia
Malaysia-based investment holding company, Caely Holdings Bhd, plans to form a joint venture to increase its lingerie production capacity in Indonesia. Gok Ching Hee, CEO says, the company is currently finalizing terms and conditions for the agreement with a potential JV partner that would then invest in a plant in Indonesia. Caely currently exports undergarments to Germany, the US and Canada. However, has been getting more enquiries from companies in Turkey, France and Australia. And this is encouraging them to expand, with the plant in Indonesia aiming to increase capacity threefold, compared to its factory in Teluk Intan, Perak.
The recent surge in orders is due to companies shifting away from sourcing their products in China, adds Gok The orders will help Caely use up the current capacity of its Indonesian plant, he states further.
India’s KPR Mills’ Q3 FY2022 net profit declines 12.57 per cent
In its Q3 FY2022, KPR Mill’s net profit declined by 12.57 per cent to Rs 211.77 crore against Rs 242.22 crore in Q2 FY2022. As per an Equity Bulls, the company’s total income grew by 4.90 per cent to Rs 1,285.83 crore from Rs 1225.72 crores reported during the previous quarter.
On a Y-o-Y basis, KPR Mills posted a 35.52 per cent growth in profit to Rs 211.77 crore for the period ended December 31, 2021 as compared to net profit of Rs 156.26 crore posted for the period ended December 31, 2020. Total income grew 36.86 per cent to Rs 1,285.83 crore during the period ended December 31, 2021 as compared to Rs 939.51 crore during the period ended December 31, 2020.
Stradivarius refreshes visual identity with a refined logo
To be more in line with its current brand positioning, Galician Group company, Stradivarius is refreshing its visual identity. As per a Fashion Network report, the move aims to assert the fashion retailer’s identity by creating a new more contemporary and refined logo, designed together with the Barcelona-based studio Ana Mirats and written in a font that was created exclusively for the brand.
The new visual illustrates Stradivarius’ two differentiating elements: treble clef, a symbol reflecting the dynamism of the brand; and the personalized font designed to provide readability and notoriety in a more contemporary style.
Founded as an independent brand by the Triquell family, Stradivarius is the fifth largest brand in terms of turnover for the Galician conglomerate that is behind Zara, Pull & Bear, Massimo Dutti, and Bershka. The brand closed the 2020 financial year with a total of 936 stores worldwide and a turnover of €1.283 billion, 26 per cent lower than the sales recorded a year earlier.
Indonesia: APSyFI says Incentives for textile imports should not exceed domestic produce
Incentives for imported textile products should not exceed those for domestic textile products, says Redma Gita Wiraswasta, Chairman, Indonesian Filament Yarn and Fiber Association (APSyFI). The current provision of incentives for imported textile raw material products has resulted in a large number of imported goods entering the country, hampering the domestic textile raw material industry, says a Indo Textiles report.
Reduction in income tax incentives in Article 22 of imports in a number of manufacturing sectors will strengthen local products, Wiraswasta adds. . It will also help domestic producers meet the demands of raw materials for the local textile market, he adds. Indonesian Fiber and Filament Yarn Producers Association (APSyFI) was Founded on May 31, 1975. 22 companies of APSyFI’s members are producing polyester staple fiber, polyester filament yarn and nylon filament yarn. Indonesia is one of the world's 10 largest producers of synthetic fiber, with total capacity of 830,000 tons of polyester staple fiber, 840,000 tons of polyester filament yarn, 32,000 tons of nylon filament yarn and 550.000 tons of rayon staple fiber.
Bangladesh cotton farmers missing out on $3 bn domestic market: CDB
Cotton farmers in Bangladesh are missing out on the $3 billion domestic market with their growing preference of other cash crops, says MD Akterruzzzaman, Executive Director, Cotton Development Board(CDB). Last year, the country produced only 1.77 lakh bales of cotton which or only around 1 per cent of the total annual consumption of the raw material of nine million bales. This has raised cotton imports price to over $3 billion annually from the US, African countries, Australia, Brazil, Pakistan, and Central Asian nations, he adds.
As per a Daily Star report, scarcity of arable land, emphasis on food production, and lower price of cotton are responsible for farmers' lack of interest in growing the textile raw material. Parvez Anwar, Head, Department of Agronomy of Bangladesh Agricultural University adds, farmers also do not have the confidence to grow cotton abundantly as they do not get ready markets and good prices. The CDB hopes to lift cotton output to 2 lakh bales by 2022 and 3 lakh bales in the next five years, as a part of its plans to grow the crop on one lakh hectares by 2030 and meet 10 to 15 per cent of local demand.
Currently, the board is implementing three major initiatives to boost cotton production and improve quality. It is executing extended project for cotton production involving Tk 150 crore; a capacity-building project involving Tk 63 crore; and a donor-backed project to improve the quality of the raw material involving Tk 8 crore. The state-run organization has teamed up with a UK-based international clothing brand to enhance the capacity of 15,000 farmers under a project. The CDB mainly provides technical support. Moreover, there are two more projects under the CDB aimed at alleviating poverty through cotton cultivation in hilly areas such as Bandarban and providing soft loans to farmers.
India: Dyes and intermediates exports surge 25 per cent April-December 2021
From April-December 2021, dyes and intermediates exports surged by 25 per cent as demand from international markets increased. As per data by Basic Chemicals, Cosmetics & Dyes Export Promotion Council (Chemexcil), India’s dyes exports touched 4.08 lakh MT from April to December 2021, compared to 3.26 lakh ton in the same period of 2020. Gujarat accounted for an estimated 70 per cent of dye and intermediate production in the country, says Bhupendra Patel, Chairman, Gujarat region, Chemexcil.
While dye exports surged, dye intermediates declined during the same period. Reduction in exporters incentives under the duty drawback scheme and the MEIS scheme made manufacturers less competitive in the international market, adds Patel. Even though April-December exports surged, manufacturing capacities are currently underutilized for dyes and intermediates manufacturers, owing to steep rise in raw material costs.
Rise in raw material costs by 60 per cent has increased exporters’ costs of operations. This has also reduced their capacities, adds Yogesh Parikh, President, Gujarat Dyestuff Manufacturers’ Association (GDMA). With textile industry sales taking a hit, the overall demand for dyes have also declined. Export demand has also gone down due to the Chinese New Year holiday across China, Hong Kong and other countries, Parikh adds.












