The textile industry in Surat has lost Rs 250 crores in two days following an indefinite strike called by transporters to protest a crackdown by the civic body on godowns in residential areas.
Over the past few days, the Surat Municipal Corporation has sealed 100 textile godowns in residential areas, and on Tuesday served notice to 70 others at Umarwada in the city.
Acting on complaints by the residents for causing nuisance and traffic problems, the SMC started a crackdown on godowns in residential areas of the city.
The transporters will have to find new godowns on their own.
Following the strike, over 350 trucks of the Surat Market Transporter Association have not left the city for the past two days. The association has also stopped taking bookings from textile traders. The strike is apparently being supported by parcel contractors and labor contractors.
The entire chain of the textile industry has been disturbed as finished products of saris and dress materials are stuck in transport godowns.
The textile industry is one of the oldest and the most widespread industries in Surat. The textile industry in Surat is mainly engaged in the activities of yarn production, weaving, processing as well as embroidery. Surat is mainly engaged in the production and trading of synthetic textile products. Nearly 30 million meters of raw fabric and 25 million meters of processed fabric are produced in Surat daily.
Global sales of personal luxury goods will rise this year, but only moderately, with higher spending in Japan and Europe compensating for flat trends in Asia and the United States.
The sector - including fashion accessories, home ware, jewelry and watches but not cars, yachts and fine art - will grow no more than two per cent this year.
Japan is expected to be the fastest growing market for luxury goods this year, with sales seen up five per cent, helped by spending from incoming Chinese tourists.
Sales in China are expected to rebound after three years of decline.
A strong dollar and uncertain consumer confidence ahead of presidential elections is expected to weigh on demand for luxury in the United States, while local spending will outweigh a slowdown in tourism in Europe on the back of security threats.
Cosmetics and leather, shoes and accessories will be the best selling product categories this year while so-called hard luxury, represented by jewelry and watches, will not grow.
In coming years, the luxury market is expected to keep expanding at an average annual rate of two to three per cent, mainly driven by growth in China.
At the end of 2015 the market was up 13 per cent. It grew one per cent at constant exchange rates.
Gap is closing all 53 of its Old Navy shops in Japan by the end of January next year. Just four years after entering the country, the chain has found itself in trouble, unable to attract shoppers with its low-end offerings. The blame goes to Gap, whose sole strategy for the chain seemed to hinge on low prices.
In a country where more than a decade of deflation has made many people take low prices for granted, Gap and other apparel companies need to come up with fresh ways to get shoppers to open their wallets.
Gap is the world’s third-largest apparel company. It had been expanding in Japan until recently. Its namesake brand hit the market in 1995, followed by its high-end Banana Republic label in 2005. Old Navy came in 2012, with Gap betting that the Japanese demand for low-price clothing would increase.
At first, customers responded well to Old Navy’s combination of the American casual aesthetic and attractive prices. But people gradually grew bored with the brand’s offerings. Despite that, Gap did not reassess its approach, and continued to simply import the same clothes that it sold in the US.
One problem is that Old Navy sizing is tailored to foreigners, and clothes from local brands fit Japanese people better.
The Shenzhen international trade fair for apparel, fabrics and accessories will be held July 7 to 9, 2016. Nearly 700 exhibitors are set to participate.
Exhibitors at the fair will showcase a wide range of high-quality fabrics for women’s wear, casual wear, lingerie and swimwear and suitings, jacquards, prints, wool, cotton, spun, denim and knitting fabrics as well as accessories, lace and embroidery, leathers and furs, yarns and fibers and design and testing products.
This year, a debut Fine Japan zone is joining the returning Taiwan and Korea pavilions as suppliers from these markets look to capture the abundant opportunities in the South China industry.
The brand new Fine Japan zone will be formed by a number of top Japanese suppliers. In addition, the returning Taiwan Pavilion expands 50 per cent in scale this year to cater to the growing interest in the South China textile market.
Taiwanese exhibitors will present a series of high end products from raw materials to fabrics, such as yarns for special fabric use, self-manufactured, -developed and -designed high-end jacquard fabrics; lace, print and knitted fabrics; computer embroidered items; fashionable jersey; high-end Tencel cotton, Tencel linen weaving and pure linen plain weave; and denim fabrics.
"Vietnam could become even more appealing to US through the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an expansive 12-nation trade deal that would phase out steep import tariffs on Vietnamese-made goods, but only if Congress puts its stamp on it. In campaign season that has ¬renewed public anxiety about US job losses to China, one Michigan shoe company stands as a stark example of how the economic -dynamics are changing quickly in Asia."
Vietnam could become even more appealing to US through the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an expansive 12-nation trade deal that would phase out steep import tariffs on Vietnamese-made goods, but only if Congress puts its stamp on it. In campaign season that has ¬renewed public anxiety about US job losses to China, one Michigan shoe company stands as a stark example of how the economic -dynamics are changing quickly in Asia.
Wolverine Worldwide exemplifies a sharp shift among American footwear and garment producers away from China toward an emerging manufacturing hot spot: Vietnam. During the past three years, the Rockford, Michigan-based maker of brands such as Keds, Hush Puppies and Saucony, has more than doubled its production in the Southeast Asian nation, taking advantage of the lower labour costs there. Vietnam now constituted nearly 30 per cent of Wolverine’s output, while China’s share had fallen from 90 per cent to 50 per cent, company officials said.
Many other US firms have made a similar move, brightening the economic fortunes of Vietnam. The communist country will become even more appealing to US capitalists through the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) if Obama has his way, an expansive 12-nation trade deal that would phase out steep import tariffs on Vietnamese-made goods.
The US president has touted the pact as a vehicle to help embed the United States in fast-emerging markets in Southeast Asia and exploit global economic trends to America’s benefit. Attempting its own economic transformation toward the service sector, China is pursuing a separate trade pact that includes Vietnam and other Southeast Asian nations. Congress has yet to ratify the accord, and lawmakers have been wary amid the anti-trade sentiment on the campaign trail.
A trade agreement that includes Vietnam, and that does not adequately protect domestic footwear manufacturers, will only accelerate this trend. For companies such as Wolverine, the deal could make an already lucrative business decision even more profitable. Said company officials said that eliminating an estimated $20 million in annual tariffs on Vietnamese-made products would reduce the cost of shoes for American consumers and boost sales. Furthermore, the officials said, declines in the company’s domestic manufacturing workforce had been offset by hiring in other departments.
Under the trade deal, US footwear tariffs, which can be as high as 40 per cent, would be phased out over seven years in Vietnam. That would give Vietnam an advantage over China, Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines, which are not TPP members, and accelerate a manufacturing boom inside the country that is already under way.
From 2013 to 2015, US footwear imports from Vietnam rose by almost 50 per cent, growing from US$2.9 billion in 2013 to US$4.3 billion in 2015, according to an analysis by the US International Trade Commission. The study found that shoe company imports to the US would rise by another 23 per cent among TPP countries, mostly from Vietnam, over 15 years.
Matt Priest, president of the Footwear Distributors and Retailers of America, estimated that US companies in Vietnam stand to save $500 million in footwear import taxes under the trade pact. Incidentally, critics said the deal would deliver another blow to an industry that had been decimated in the United States. Former Democratic congressman Michael Michaud said in a letter to the Obama administration in 2011 that domestic footwear production fell by 75 per cent between 1999 and 2007 and that 28,000 US jobs were lost.
But Obama has received support from the industry’s heaviest hitters. Last May, he visited Nike’s headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, to highlight a pledge from Nike to create 10,000 new domestic jobs in advanced manufacturing if the TPP accord is approved by Congress. That figure is dwarfed by Nike’s workforce in Vietnam, its largest manufacturing base. Obama emphasised that the TPP would require Vietnam to raise working standards, set a minimum wage and allow workers to form labor unions.
Surprisingly, Obama’s message also has not gone over well with one of Nike’s competitors, New Balance, which employs 1,400 manufacturing workers in the Northeast United States – the largest domestic workforce of any athletic shoe maker. This spring, New Balance formally announced its opposition to the TPP, citing broken promises from the Obama administration.
Matt LeBretton, a company spokesman, said the administration had agreed to set up meetings between New Balance and the Pentagon. The company has been lobbying the Defence Department to expand a congressional requirement that mandates military boots and dress shoes be made entirely in the United States to also cover athletic shoes.
Those meetings never materialised, LeBretton said, even though New Balance invested millions of dollars in new domestic machinery.
Obama administration officials said they tried to work with New Balance, providing longer tariff phaseouts than are required in other parts of the deal, and they noted that the company also makes most of its shoes in China and Vietnam. Still, Nike, with a far larger Vietnamese operation, stands to gain more from the trade deal.
Jonathan Akeroyd has been appointed new CEO of Italian luxury fashion house Gianni Versace. He succeeds Gian Giacomo Ferraris, who joined Versace in 2009. Akeroyd served as CEO of Alexander McQueen from 2004 till May 2016. At Alexander McQueen, Jonathan was responsible for the growth and international expansion of the brand, working with the creative and leadership teams during one of the label’s most robust periods.
Alexander McQueen is known for its dramatic, gorgeously constructed pieces, combining elements of British tailoring with French couture. He brings a proven track record in building global brands, steering growth and driving strategic development. His industry expertise and vision will be key to advancing the next phase of Versace’s development.
At Versace Jonathan Akeroyd looks forward to implementing a long-term business strategy that supports the visionary and creative direction of Donatella Versace and her team. Donatella Versace is the vice president and artistic director.
Versace is an iconic lifestyle brand recognised globally as a premier name in luxury. It designs, manufactures, distributes and retails fashion and lifestyle products including haute couture, women’s and men’s ready-to-wear, accessories etc. The brand’s products are available globally through a network of over 180 Versace retail stores.
Vietnam one of the poorest members of TPP’s first round of members. But the nature of its economy – manufacturing and export-driven – means that falling tariff barriers with the US and other member states could be a huge boon to its economy. TPP (Trans Pacific Partnership) offers Vietnam preferential access to markets representing 40 per cent of global GDP. This can provide producers in Vietnam with a significant advantage over non-TPP countries in areas such as apparel or agriculture. In such sensitive sectors in some TPP countries, duties can peak well into the double-digit range.
Moreover, TPP will tackle non-tariff barriers to trade as well, which often impose significant barriers to trade. For example, TPP will streamline customs procedures and improve transparency of related regulations. Such trade reforms will offer Vietnam an economically important expansion of market access to the TPP region.
Vietnam’s competitively low cost of labor, compared to the other Asean nations in the TPP like Brunei, Singapore and Malaysia, and its young and growing middle-income economy, makes it an appealing destination for companies to expand into. The TPP will significantly enhance Vietnam’s attractiveness both as a market and a production hub. However, even if it is immediately implemented, TPP will not have a major impact on trade until at least 2021.
Techtextil/Texprocess NA, which finished its three-day run recently, brought North American performance and protective apparel and industrial product manufacturers together with some 519 exhibitors of the latest textile materials and manufacturing processes. The Messe Frankfurt GmbH show took place in Atlanta in conjunction with the JEC Americas Composites show.
Confirming the importance of the North American technical markets and there is an increase in foreign manufacturers setting up textile operations in the US Dave Gardner, Managing Director, Sewn Products Equipment & Suppliers of America (SPESA), which co-sponsored the Texprocess show said that their industry is really coming back home, and China and India are seeing the advantages of manufacturing in the USA.
With 40 per cent of the total volume share, North America has become the leading consumer of technical textiles for personal protective equipment (PPE), according to Mary-Lynn Landgraf, senior international trade specialist for the US Dept. of Commerce/OTEXA. Rich Lippert, marketing director at Glen Raven Technical Fabrics (GRTF), concurred. In general, we are seeing an increased demand for the traceability and peace-of-mind afforded by US-sourced FR materials. Lippert also commented that GRTF was seeing growth in the geosynthetics market, particularly in India and China.
The ultimate take-home message from the 85th IWTO Congress, the annual conference of the wool textile industry was - Opportunities for wool exist where they never have before. Stand-out sessions from among the more than 30 featured speakers emphasized the role of Generations Y and Z in creating demand for wool, as well as an often overlooked demographic: empty-nesters with the power to spend. Co-hosted by the Federation of Australian Wool Organisations (FAWO), more than 420 delegates from 25 countries attended the three-day event.
Among the featured speakers were Craig Vanderoef, Senior Director at adidas, Germany and Phil Dickinson, Founder and Creative Director of Some Ideas, UK, both back by popular demand, along with Ermenegildo Zegna CEO Paolo Zegna, Parlour X Founder/Owner Eva Galambos and Emerald Group CBDO Melinda O’Rourke who joined Australian fashion journalist Mitchell Oakley-Smith for the latest installation of the Woolmark-led Retail Forum on the last day of the Congress.
The intermix of supply, demand, upstream and downstream has been perfect, IWTO President Peter Ackroyd said of the Congress in his closing remarks.
Falling productivity and rising infrastructure costs are putting Cambodia’s garment industry at a disadvantage as it tries to compete with rivals Vietnam, Bangladesh and Myanmar, according to a leading union. The Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia (GMAC) recently urged the government to launch a productivity campaign to improve the situation in one of the country’s biggest industries. GMAC quoted the ILO’s bulletin between 2011 and 2014, which said labor productivity in the garment and footwear sector dropped by about 14 percent. It said labor productivity appears to have fallen as the growth in employment has outstripped the value the sector added to the economy.
GMAC’s secretary-general Ken Loo was quoted as saying that the decline in productivity appears to have continued into 2016 and the organization has asked workers, unions and the government to focus more on improving productivity in the industry, as competition is increasing globally.
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