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Friday, 22 March 2019 13:38

NCTO appoints new office bearers

 

The National Council of Textile Organisations (NCTO) held its 16thAnnual Meeting from March 19-21 in Washington, DC.  The organisation elected Leib Oehmig, CEO, Glen Raven, Inc as its Chairman. Glen Raven is an innovative leader in textile research and development, dying, spinning, weaving and finishing, and distribution and logistics.

NCTO also appointed David Roberts, CEO, CAP Yarns, Inc as the Vice-Chairman of the organisation. A specialty yarn manufacturer, CAP Yarns develops unique yarns for the knitting and weaving industry.

The US employed around was 594,147 people in its textile supply chain in 2018.  The total value of shipments for U.S. textiles and apparel was $76.8 billion. Its exports of fiber, textiles and apparel were $30.1 billion in 2018. 

Jeanologia, the world leader in the development of eco-efficient technology, launched H2 Zero, a revolutionary technology allowing the complete elimination of discharge in the textile industry. H2 Zero manages to eliminate the textile industry’s discharge, recycling the little water that it needs by using a combination of its jean production technologies. This tool has been successfully tried and tested by a few brands. 

The technology contributes to the complete dehydration and detoxification of the textile industry. Furthermore, it allows the industry to grow by 50 per cent for the next three years in its ecological income statement. Jeanologia is the first European company to launch an ecological income statement through which it measures cubic meters of contaminated water that do not go into our rivers and seas, thanks to their technology and services.

 

Friday, 22 March 2019 13:34

Indonesia to host machinery show Peraga

Peraga will be held in Indonesia from March 28 to 30, 2019. This is a comprehensive international standard TPT (Textile and Textile Product) industry exhibition comprising Indo Intertex, Inatex, Indo Dyechem and Indo Texprint. These are four interrelated exhibitions. Indo Intertex will display a variety of machinery and equipment for the textile and garment industry. Inatex will display fiber, yarn, fabric, accessories and fashion products as well as nonwoven industry products. Indo Dyechem will display chemical, coloring and finishing process equipment while Indo Texprint will display printing machines digital textiles.

As many as 15,000 visitors, entrepreneurs and professionals are expected. Various seminars are also lined up on topics like sustainable industries, creative industries, and start-up fashion businesses. No less lively will be a competition on fashion design and training on digital textile printing.

In the era of Industry 4.0 factories in Indonesia are updating and using machine tools that are fast, inexpensive and easy to operate and environmentally friendly, and getting more efficient and able to compete. The 2017 and 2018 exhibitions saw an increased volume of business transactions, which is expected to increase at the 17th edition this year. The theme of the exhibition is Making Indonesia 4.0.

 

Friday, 22 March 2019 18:53

Guess Q4 revenues up five per cent

For the fourth quarter Guess revenues rose 5.7 per cent. The American retail revenues was down 0.7 per cent, while comps were up six per cent while American wholesale revenues for Guess jumped 19.2 per cent during the quarter. European revenues increased 4.1 per cent, while retail comps were flat. Asia was the strongest market for Guess, with revenues increasing 21.7 per cent and retail comps up 13 per cent during the quarter.

For the whole fiscal year net revenue increased 10.4 per cent. Retail revenues in the Americas fell one per cent while retail comp sales including e-commerce increased four per cent. Revenue for the Americas wholesale segment jumped 13.6 per cent. European revenues increased 14.4 per cent. Retail comp sales including e-commerce increased five per cent, while Asia revenues climbed 25.7 per cent. Retail comp sales in Asia were up 15 per cent.

Guess was also able to expand the company’s operating margin, despite cost pressures related to its transition to new distribution center in Europe. For the fiscal year ending February 1, 2020, the company is expecting consolidated net revenue to increase between four and five per cent and for the upcoming first quarter an increase in sales between 2.5 per cent and 3.5 per cent.

 

Friday, 22 March 2019 18:51

Fashion comes of age in China

Twenty-two years ago, the fashion market in China was conservative and not very established. But now, the market looks very different. In general, Chinese customers like and want the same styles that fashion consumers everywhere else are into. This is the right approach for western brands looking to break into China. People in China want western product as it is. But it has to be marketed in a way that it fits the Chinese model. Failing to follow this advise is part of the reason many brands have found themselves in hot water in China over the last year or so.

While some of the initial buzz about Chinese consumers in the luxury fashion market was related to their spending outside the country, this paradigm is changing. Half of all luxury spending in China is expected to be domestic by next year. That means, brands that don’t have a physical presence in China will be missing out on a large chunk of Chinese fashion consumption. In response, a large number of luxury brands like Mulberry and Valentino have entered the market in the past year. The luxury goods market in China is expected to grow by about 20 per cent this year.

Friday, 22 March 2019 18:50

Dubai gets taste of Dior

Dior showcased its latest haute couture collection in Dubai recently to a crowd of Mideast-based fashionistas, social media figures, celebrities, buyers, designers and editors. It was the first show in Dubai for the French fashion house under a large circus-style tent. The well-heeled Dubai crowd was wowed as models in sequined helmets presented the pieces inspired by the circus. Dior has a history with the big top, with the circus theme first appearing in a 1955 styled photo and reappearing under John Galliano’s creative direction.

The haute couture collection included details like a tattooed body suit that conjured up images of Victorian-era circus performers and a tulle jumpsuit of multi-colored streaks in satin bands and dramatically square shoulders. The presentation in Dubai, however, also included 15 entirely new creations unveiled especially for the show’s design conscious Arab Gulf-based audience. Dubai’s exuberant displays of luxury and the city’s surreal, futuristic-looking skyline were the ideal backdrop to the show.

Exclusive pieces at the invitation-only show, reflected in many ways Dubai’s own ambitions to become a global fashion and design hub. The emirate of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates has a reputation for glamour and over-the-top projects like manmade palm shaped islands, the world’s tallest tower and a seemingly endless pipeline of new five-star hotels and spas.

China Interdye and China Textile Printing will take place from April 10 to 12, 2019. With a total area of 40,000 sq mts, the two exhibitions have so far attracted more than 650 enterprises from 17 countries. The exhibits cover all kinds of advanced environment-friendly dyestuff, organic pigments, catalysts, intermediates, as well as environmental impact assessment equipment and digital textile printers in addition to printing and dyeing automation technologies and materials.

Exhibitors will mainly promote new environmentally friendly printing and dyeing products and application technologies. In addition, delegations of exhibitors from India, South Korea and Taiwan will join hands in a move to increase participation.

China Interdye is a gathering of the global dyeing and chemical industry. China Textile Printing aims at creating a one-stop shop for the procurement of textile, printing and dyeing products while, at the same time, serving as a wider platform for the development of the industry.

From January to November 2018, production of printed and dyed cloth in China was up 2.26 per cent year on year. Income of printing and dyeing enterprises was up 4.55 per cent year on year. Their total profit was up 13.06 per cent year on year.

 

Friday, 22 March 2019 18:46

Britain in no hurry for FTA with India

Post Brexit, India will have to wait a while to sign free trade agreement with Britain. Britain has flagged some high-value trade disputes involving British companies in India as a warning sign on the road ahead. British companies have not found it entirely easy to operate in India. Difficulties remain despite the India getting 53 position in the ease of doing business rankings. Instead Britain is looking forward to concluding agreements that will probably be easier and smoother to manage, such as that with Australia or New Zealand. This is despite the fact that some of the largest number of skilled professionals working and living in Britain comes from India.

The lengthy FTA negotiations between India and the European Union are seen as a learning curve for future India-UK trade ties. With India, the Department of International Trade is looking first at how to address other barriers to bilateral trade that would help build toward a future trade relationship rather than going straight for an FTA. Negotiations between the EU and India on an FTA have not yet concluded.

The UK is due to leave the EU on March 29. It voted to leave the EU nearly three years ago.

Apparel exporters in Bangladesh will get cumulative cash incentives up to 12 per cent. An exporter gets up to three types of cash incentives, out of four, against apparel exports. Apparel exporters get four per cent cash incentive as an alternative to duty bonds and duty drawbacks, four per cent for apparel product exports for small and medium industries, four per cent for exports of new textile and garment products and expanding export of textile items to new markets, markets other than the United States, Canada and the European Union, and two per cent cash incentives for exports of apparel products to the EU market in addition to the four per cent cash incentive. Earlier, there was a limit of 10 per cent incentives, even if the cumulative incentive was 12 per cent.

In September 2018, Bangladesh announced cash incentives in favor of exporters of 35 products, including apparel, for the current fiscal year of 2018-19. Cash incentives were introduced to the non-traditional market back in 2010, which were five per cent at that time. Owing to duty-free access and cash incentives, garment owners have now started exploring new destinations and markets. China, the world’s largest apparel supplier, now allows duty-free access to over 5000 Bangladesh products, which eventually has enhanced the export growth of the apparel sector.

India may impose a duty on jute sacking cloth from Bangladesh. The thinking is, the product is being dumped to avoid duty on jute sacking bags. Bangladesh jute mills and traders fear they would be hit hard if India imposes the duty. Usually, the anti-dumping duty on a product is the same amount by which it undercuts the domestically manufactured product.

In January 2017, India imposed anti-dumping duty on imported jute products from Bangladesh including jute yarn, twine, hessian fabric and jute sacking bags for a period of five years. So far jute sacking cloth is outside the purview of the duty. India accounts for 20 per cent of Bangladesh's jute goods exports. Some years ago, Indian jute mills had accused Bangladeshi exporters -- for the first time in 40 years -- of selling jute products at prices lower than those in India's domestic market.

Bangladesh’s jute sector, which involves about 40 lakh farmers and about two lakh workers, processes more than nine lakh tons of raw jute. The country currently has 26 jute mills. Jute is one of the most affordable natural fibers and considered second only to cotton in the amount produced and the variety of uses of vegetable fibers.