FW
Hellmann and MAS Holdings expand apparel logistics capabilities in Sri Lanka
To address the increasing complexity of global garment supply chains, Hellmann Worldwide Logistics and MAS Holdings have expanded their collaborative infrastructure with a specialized fashion-focused distribution hub in Sri Lanka. This facility is engineered to provide end-to-end supply chain visibility for international apparel brands, integrating advanced inventory management systems to mitigate delays in raw material procurement and finished goods dispatch.
Enhancing velocity in fashion retail
The strategic deployment of this hub serves as a critical response to the shortening lead times demanded by global retail giants. By locating logistics operations in closer proximity to manufacturing clusters, the partnership aims to significantly reduce dwell times for high-volume apparel orders destined for North American and European markets. This operational enhancement is essential for brands transitioning to ‘fast-fashion’ replenishment cycles, where speed-to-market is a primary competitive advantage. The facility emphasizes multi-channel fulfillment, supporting both wholesale distribution and direct-to-consumer logistics, thereby providing a flexible framework for retailers navigating unpredictable market demand.
Strengthening regional trade resilience
As global apparel brands prioritize de-risking their supply networks, the new hub functions as a stable node for sustainable and compliant logistics. By streamlining the flow of technical textiles and high-value garments, the initiative provides a robust buffer against regional trade fluctuations. Industry analysts note, such infrastructure is paramount for Sri Lanka to maintain its position as a preferred sourcing partner for global labels, especially as brands increasingly demand end-to-end digital product traceability. This integration of logistics and manufacturing efficiency is expected to improve cost structures, allowing both companies to scale operations as demand for regional manufacturing intensifies.
Logistics and manufacturing partnership
A leading global apparel manufacturer based in Sri Lanka, MAS Holdings specializes in intimate wear and high-performance activewear. Hellmann Worldwide Logistics provides global supply chain solutions, including fashion-specific logistics and freight management. Together, they streamline the movement of goods from manufacturing floors to global retail distribution centers.
Express Inc navigates complex restructuring following Chapter 11 filing
The apparel sector is witnessing a significant consolidation as Express Inc, the prominent specialty retailer, undergoes a comprehensive restructuring. Following the judicial oversight of its Chapter 11 proceedings, the company is executing a definitive store rationalization plan to stabilize its balance sheet. This initiative involves the permanent closure of numerous underperforming retail locations across the United States, a measure necessitated by sustained declines in physical store traffic and the failure of recent turnaround strategies to resonate with target consumers. Management is currently prioritizing the streamlining of its operational cost structure, seeking to exit high-overhead leases that have disproportionately impacted margins throughout the previous fiscal cycles.
Transitioning toward a sustainable omnichannel future
The restructuring mandate extends beyond physical contraction; it encompasses a broader realignment of the company’s inventory management and digital commerce architecture. By consolidating its retail presence, Express Inc aims to shift resources toward boosting its online platform and improving the efficiency of its remaining omnichannel touchpoints. Industry analysts have noted the brand’s inability to capture Gen Z market share, coupled with intensifying competition from fast-fashion disruptors, has underscored the urgency of this transformation. As the company continues to navigate these financial complexities, the overarching focus remains on achieving long-term solvency through a leaner, more agile business model that prioritizes profitability over expansive physical distribution.
Offering modern styles for work and leisure
Express Inc. is a specialty retailer offering fashion apparel and accessories for women and men. It focuses on modern, versatile styles suitable for work and leisure. Following recent financial headwinds, the company is undergoing a major restructuring to rationalize its store footprint, enhance digital capabilities, and improve overall operational profitability.
Tech giants and couture: The new economic synergy
Silicon Valley is currently reconfiguring its corporate identity, moving away from utilitarian aesthetics toward a sophisticated ‘taste economy.’ Characterized by the emergence of ‘taste-washing,’ this shift sees major technology firms integrating high-fashion sensibilities and curated artisanal collaborations into their brand portfolios to cultivate cultural capital.
Leveraging cultural capital through apparel
The strategy extends beyond mere executive appearances at international fashion weeks. Corporations are increasingly releasing proprietary apparel lines, such as Palantir’s high-demand, domestically manufactured chore coats, which frame complex software services within the narrative of American industrial heritage. By adopting the visual language of heritage brands, these organizations aim to soften their corporate image, presenting technology through a lens of craftsmanship and human-centric design. Industry analysts suggest that this trend signifies a move towards branding that prioritizes aesthetic values as a proxy for corporate trustworthiness, essentially transforming fashion into a strategic instrument of public relations and brand positioning.
Bridging the gap between concept and consumer
This convergence of sectors arrives at a time when traditional couture is simultaneously questioning its own relationship with the wearer. The recent debate at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival regarding the functionality of conceptual garments highlights a growing industry preference for design that balances narrative impact with ergonomics. As tech companies invest in highly curated aesthetics, the apparel sector faces a unique opportunity to provide the "cultural fluency" these giants seek. The challenge for established retail brands is to maintain their authenticity as they compete for attention in a marketplace where software developers are now influencers in the front row. Successful integration will require apparel firms to provide high-concept garments that remain accessible, ensuring that the spectacle of fashion does not overshadow the necessity of the wearer’s comfort and utility.
The emergence of the taste economy
The taste economy represents the strategic alignment of technology firms with high-end fashion and art to enhance brand perception. Key sectors include curated apparel, luxury experiences, and high-quality merchandising. Companies are utilizing these initiatives to drive market penetration among Gen Z and millennial demographics while shifting the public discourse from corporate utility to cultural relevance. This phenomenon is currently reshaping traditional retail partnerships and setting a new benchmark for brand identity in the AI era.
Strategic cotton duty waiver boosts Indian textile export competitiveness
In a significant move to stabilize the domestic apparel value chain, the Union Finance Ministry has exempted cotton imports from customs duties and associated agricultural cesses for a five-month window, effective June 1, 2026. This intervention addresses critical supply-side bottlenecks that have hampered the sector’s global price competitiveness, particularly against regional rivals in Bangladesh and Vietnam who benefit from duty-free raw material access.
Addressing cost volatility in global markets
Accounting for approximately 8 per cent–10 per cent of India’s total merchandise exports, the textile and apparel industry has faced significant headwinds due to fluctuating raw material prices and softening global demand. Government data indicates, total textile and apparel exports reached $35.79 billion in FY26, a 2.2 per cent decline from the previous fiscal year. Industry leaders, including the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), have consistently highlighted that high import duties on long-staple cotton—sourced primarily from the US, Egypt, and Australia - were impeding India's ability to maintain thin margins in the highly price-sensitive international apparel trade. By removing the 11 per cent effective duty burden until October 31, 2026, the government aims to lower production costs for small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and improve the global standing of Indian manufacturers.
Leveraging new trade frameworks
Beyond domestic policy support, the sector is capitalizing on a diversification strategy to mitigate regional trade volatility. While traditional markets like the US remain central, significant growth has been observed in newer destinations such as the UAE, Germany, and Spain, where Indian exports have seen double-digit increases. The operationalization of the India-Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) on June 1 serves as a strategic pivot to further diversify market reach. According to industry analysts, these duty-free avenues, combined with the temporary cotton relief, provide a much-needed operational buffer.
As India pushes toward a $100 billion export target by 2030, the focus is shifting toward value-added production - such as performance-treated, sustainable, and technical textiles—which now command a premium in European and North American markets.
A comprehensive value chain
The Indian textile industry is a comprehensive value chain covering fiber production, spinning, weaving, and garment manufacturing. Major export categories include ready-made garments, cotton yarn, and home textiles. The sector currently prioritizes modernization and sustainable, compliant manufacturing to secure long-term contracts with global retail majors.
India-Oman trade pact opens new avenues for textile exporters
Having officially entered into force on June 1, 2026, the India-Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) marks a transformative chapter for the domestic textile and apparel sector. By eliminating the prevailing 5 per cent import duties on various textile products, the agreement provides Indian manufacturers with an immediate competitive advantage in a region that serves as a vital logistics gateway for the broader Gulf, East African, and Middle Eastern markets.
Strategic market integration
India is rapidly solidifying its footprint in the Omani textile market. Recent data underscores this momentum, with India’s share of Oman’s total textile imports rising from 9.3 per cent in 2023 to approximately 22 per cent in 2024. As bilateral trade reached $11.18 billion in the FY25-26, the CEPA is expected to further catalyze this growth. Industry stakeholders view the deal as a critical structural shift, particularly for the readymade garments, made-ups, and man-made fiber segments, which have historically faced price sensitivity in the Gulf. This agreement provides the necessary fiscal relief for our MSMEs to achieve greater scale and integration within global value chains, noted a senior official from the Ministry of Commerce.
Logistics and supply chain resilience
Beyond tariff reductions, the partnership positions Oman as a strategic hub for Indian exports, leveraging ports such as Sohar and Salalah to mitigate risks associated with regional maritime volatility. For apparel exporters, the ability to bypass traditional bottlenecks by utilizing these out-of-Strait ports offers a more resilient supply chain architecture. Exporters are now encouraged to utilize the Trade Connect portal to secure preferential Certificates of Origin, ensuring that shipments transition smoothly under the new zero-duty framework. As India targets a $100 billion textile export valuation by 2030, this integration with the Omani market serves as a blueprint for diversifying reach beyond conventional Western destinations.
A cornerstone of the national economy
The Indian textile and apparel industry encompasses the entire value chain from fiber production to finished garments. The sector remains a cornerstone of the national economy, prioritizing exports to the US, EU, and Middle East. Current growth strategies emphasize product diversification, sustainable manufacturing, and deeper penetration into FTA-enabled markets to maintain global competitiveness.
Global apparel supply chains realign as India navigates trade volatility

The global apparel and textile sector is experiencing a significant structural shift, as major manufacturers and retailers move away from traditional, single-source dependency in favor of multi-country footprints. Much like the consumer goods industry recently de-risked its logistics by moving operations to mitigate regional instability, apparel firms are now aggressively rerouting supply chains to navigate tariff shocks, raw material volatility, and shifting geopolitical landscapes.
Redrawing the global textile map
The current landscape is characterized by a strategic departure from centralized production. Major exporters are increasingly reassigning US-bound production orders to more favorable geographic hubs. For instance, Pearl Global Industries has reported growing demand for its operations in Vietnam, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and Guatemala, highlighting a deliberate movement of capacity to locations that offer better trade access or cost efficiencies. Similarly, other top-tier exporters are leveraging manufacturing bases in Africa to insulate their North American supply chains from potential disruptions. This transition reflects a broader “China plus one” strategy, now evolving into a more complex, diversified portfolio approach as global buyers prioritize supply chain resilience over singular cost advantages.
Strengthening domestic competitiveness
In response to these global pressures, the Indian government and industry leaders are implementing a dual-track strategy focused on both raw material security and long-term cost optimization. To address domestic input cost spikes, the Finance Ministry recently waived the 11 per cent import duty on cotton, effective from June 1 through October 30, 2026. This intervention is designed to ensure adequate raw material availability for the textile industry, particularly for MSMEs, and to stabilize costs after cotton prices experienced significant fluctuations, previously spiking to Rs 71,000 per candy.
Furthermore, the government is currently developing a comprehensive cost roadmap to align India’s textile ecosystem with international benchmarks. By mapping raw materials, compliance standards, and taxation frameworks, the initiative aims to close the competitiveness gap. Industry bodies are actively lobbying to increase the Remission of State and Central Taxes and Levies (RoSCTL) benefits to 10 per cent, a move viewed as essential to achieving parity with the duty-free advantages enjoyed by manufacturers in Bangladesh and Vietnam.
Challenges and future outlook
While India targets a $100 billion export valuation by 2030, the path forward requires addressing structural hurdles. Data indicates, labor productivity in India remains 20 per cent to 40 per cent lower than that of key competitors, and the nation currently holds only a 6 per cent share of the $107.7 billion US textile import market.
However, the outlook remains cautiously optimistic. As labor costs rise in Vietnam and political instability creates uncertainty in other manufacturing hubs, India is positioning itself as a reliable, balanced growth destination. By tapping into strategic trade agreements with the UK, Japan, and Australia, Indian manufacturers are moving beyond traditional reliance on the US market. The consensus among industry stakeholders is that the current period represents a watershed moment; in the 2026 trade environment, supply chains are no longer snapping—they are effectively rerouting, and India is positioning its manufacturing base to capture the resulting long-term value.
India’s textile sector targets global supply chain shift with $100 bn export push

As global brands push up efforts to diversify sourcing beyond traditional manufacturing hubs, India is repositioning its textile industry through an integrated growth strategy aimed at transforming the country into a full-spectrum sourcing destination. The push comes at a time when geopolitical disruptions, compliance-heavy retail sourcing norms, and rising demand for sustainable manufacturing are forcing global apparel companies to reassess long-term supplier relationships.
Addressing the TEXPROCIL Export Awards in Mumbai, Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman outlined the government’s vision of connecting the entire textile value chain: from farm and fibre to factory, fashion, and foreign markets. The objective is to scale India’s textile and apparel sector to Rs 24.17 lakh crore ($250 billion) while driving exports to Rs 9.67 lakh crore ($100 billion) by 2030 as part of the broader Viksit Bharat 2047 roadmap.
The strategy reflects a move away from fragmented, low-value textile manufacturing toward vertically integrated, globally compliant production ecosystems capable of handling large institutional sourcing contracts.
Manufacturing infrastructure the core competitive lever
India’s textile sector already has pole position within the domestic economy, contributing roughly 2.3 per cent to GDP while supporting nearly 6 crore livelihoods directly and indirectly. The industry also accounts for almost 12 per cent of India’s total export earnings.
Table: Overview of textile sector’s contribution to Indian economy
GDP contribution 2.3% of India's total Gross Domestic Product
Total National Export Earnings Accounts for nearly 12% of total outbound trade revenues
Socio-Economic Employment Base Supports close to 6 crore (60 million) livelihoods directly and indirectly
Aggregate Fiscal Year Exports (FY26) Rs 3.01 lakh crore ($33.5 billion) across all textile segments
Core Cotton Textile Consortium Exports Contributes approximately $11 billion to national outbound trade
To support future export growth, the government is pushing for investment in large-scale manufacturing clusters. The rollout of seven PM MITRA textile parks has already attracted investment commitments over Rs 27,000 crore. These integrated parks are designed to streamline operations across spinning, processing, weaving, and garment manufacturing while reducing logistics inefficiencies that historically weakened India’s competitiveness against rival sourcing nations.
The infrastructure push is being backed by policy incentives under the Amended Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme (ATUFS) and a broader fiscal framework introduced through recent Union Budgets. New initiatives including the Textile Expansion and Employment Scheme, National Fibre Scheme, Tex-Eco Initiative, and Samarth 2.0 are intended to modernize production capacity, improve labour productivity, and support sustainable manufacturing upgrades.
Industry stakeholders say these integrated manufacturing hubs are critical as global retailers shift toward vendor consolidation, preferring suppliers capable of delivering scale, compliance, and speed under one operational network.
ESG compliance in focus global retail sourcing
While cost competitiveness remains important, sourcing decisions among large western retailers are increasingly being shaped by environmental and governance metrics. Major fashion groups including H&M, Zara, and Marks & Spencer are tightening sourcing requirements around traceability, carbon disclosures, labour transparency, and recycled or organic material usage.
This is fundamentally altering how Indian exporters compete in global markets. Manufacturers that invest in automated cutting systems, energy-efficient production lines, water recycling infrastructure, and blockchain-enabled traceability are securing premium contracts and better margins. Conversely, exporters operating on legacy manufacturing systems are facing pricing pressure and declining order volumes.
To address capability gaps, the government has launched the Advanced Certificate Program in International Trade (ACPIT), designed to train exporters in handling ESG audits, non-tariff barriers, compliance documentation, and digital inventory systems. The shift indicates that future competitiveness in apparel exports will rely as much on technological and sustainability credentials as on traditional labour-cost advantages.
FTAs and incentives cushion global volatility
India’s textile ambitions are also unfolding against a volatile geopolitical backdrop. Recent disruptions across maritime trade corridors, including tensions affecting the Strait of Hormuz shipping route, have heightened concerns around freight costs, delivery delays, and raw material inflation.
To offset some of these pressures, the Directorate General of Foreign Trade has extended benefits under the RoDTEP scheme, restoring export tax rebates and helping manufacturers partially neutralize embedded domestic levies. At the same time, India is expanding its market access through a series of trade negotiations and free trade agreements with the European Union, the UK, the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), Oman, and New Zealand.
These agreements are expected to lower tariff barriers for Indian cotton, silk, yarn, and finished apparel products in major consumer markets. Experts say, preferential market access could significantly improve India’s position against competing sourcing destinations such as Bangladesh, Vietnam, and China, particularly in premium apparel categories.
Traceable cotton a premium export asset
One of the clearest examples of India’s shift toward value-added textile exports is the Kasturi Cotton initiative managed by The Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council. The program combines farm-level DNA tagging with blockchain-based tracking systems to authenticate fibre origin, quality, and environmental credentials. Over 2,000 exporters are currently using Kasturi Cotton certification to service international buyers demanding stringent sustainability verification.
The initiative effectively converts cotton from a commodity input into a branded and traceable raw material asset. By improving transparency and reducing quality uncertainty, exporters are better positioned to protect margins from commodity price swings while strengthening relationships with large institutional buyers.
For India’s textile industry, the broader message is becoming clear: future export growth will depend not merely on manufacturing scale, but on the ability to integrate technology, sustainability, infrastructure, and trade access into a globally competitive sourcing ecosystem.
India balances farm interests and export ambitions with temporary cotton import relief
"

" The textile industry has received a policy reprieve after the Ministry of Finance eliminated the 11 per cent import duty on raw cotton until October 30, 2026. The temporary suspension of both the Basic Customs Duty and the Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess (AIDC) is designed to address a growing domestic cotton shortage that has pushed up raw material prices and weakened the competitiveness of Indian textile exporters.
The move marks the fourth tariff intervention in the cotton sector this year, highlighting the mounting pressure on policymakers to balance the interests of farmers, spinning mills and export-oriented apparel manufacturers. With India simultaneously pursuing ambitious trade opportunities through newly operational agreements with the US, the EU and the UK, ensuring access to competitively priced cotton has become critical for maintaining export momentum.
Supply gap forces policy response
The government's decision comes against the backdrop of a growing mismatch between cotton production and industrial demand. Current estimates indicate domestic cotton production of 291 lakh bales against annual mill consumption requirements of approximately 312 lakh bales, creating a deficit of 21 lakh bales before accounting for inventory requirements.
The shortage has been aggravated by shipping disruptions linked to geopolitical tensions in West Asia, which have delayed cargo movements and increased logistics costs. The resulting supply squeeze triggered a sharp increase in domestic cotton prices, with lint rates rising from around Rs 52,000 per candy to nearly Rs 63,000 per candy within six weeks.
Table: India's cotton and textile market
|
Textile segment |
Annual volume/target value |
Deficit/growth |
|
Domestic Cotton Production |
291 lakh bales |
-21 lakh bales (Shortfall) |
|
Spinning Mill Raw Demand |
312 lakh bales |
Equilibrium Baseline |
|
Ready-Made Garment Exports |
$15.80 bn |
-1.4% Annualised Contraction |
|
Yarn, Fabrics & Made-ups Exports |
$11.58 bn |
-4.0% YoY Decline |
|
Total Apparel Sector Exports |
$35.79 bn |
-2.2% Sector-Wide Drop |
|
National Export Roadmap Target |
$100 bn by 2030 |
Requires 17% CAGR |
The data underscores the challenge facing the textile sector. While the government is targeting a substantial increase in exports, recent performance across apparel, yarn and made-up categories has shown contraction, largely due to cost pressures and weakening competitiveness.
Rising costs ripple through the value chain
Cotton typically accounts for 80-85 per cent of spinning costs, making raw material inflation one of the most influential variables in textile manufacturing economics. As cotton prices rose, spinning mills passed on higher costs to yarn buyers, triggering a chain reaction across fabric manufacturing, processing and garment production. Exporters operating on fixed-price contracts found it increasingly difficult to absorb these cost increases. Industry stakeholders opine, several manufacturers have either slowed production schedules or deferred expansion plans while awaiting greater pricing stability.
A Sakthivel, Regional Chairman of the Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) says that apparel exporters require predictable raw material pricing to compete effectively in global markets. And the removal of import barriers allow manufacturers to source cotton at internationally competitive rates and improve order visibility ahead of major retail buying seasons in Western markets.
The experience of Tirupur-based Euro-Tex Apparel reveals the pressure facing exporters. The company reportedly faced a 20 per cent increase in yarn procurement costs within a month while negotiating seasonal contracts with UK retailers. Unable to transfer those costs to buyers, management reduced factory utilisation by 25 per cent to protect operating margins.
The importance of premium cotton
The import requirement extends beyond simply filling a volume deficit. Industry estimates suggest roughly 70 per cent of expected imports will comprise medium-to-long staple cotton used to maintain continuous spinning operations. The remaining 30 per cent is the higher-value Extra-Long Staple (ELS) cotton variety such as American Pima and Egyptian Giza. India currently produces less than 15 per cent of its domestic ELS requirements, making imports essential for premium textile categories.
ELS cotton serves as the foundation for luxury apparel, fine-count yarns and high-end home textile products. Manufacturers estimate that value addition through spinning, weaving and garmenting can multiply the export value of imported ELS fibre several times before it reaches Western retail shelves.
Competitive pressures intensify
Industry associations have long argued that import duties placed Indian manufacturers at a disadvantage relative to regional competitors such as Bangladesh and Vietnam, where cotton imports are largely duty-free. As per Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), the previous tariff structure added approximately 8-10 cents per kg to the cost of combed yarn production. This differential became particularly problematic during periods when domestic cotton prices exceeded international benchmarks.
Manufacturers in Gujarat and Maharashtra reported situations where local yarn production costs rose above global market levels, prompting some companies to shift towards synthetic blends or reduce operating schedules. The downstream impact was also visible in export-oriented clusters such as Ludhiana and Panipat. Northern Loomworks, a home textile exporter based in Panipat, reportedly faced shortages of high-grade long-staple fibre needed for premium bed linen production. The company was forced to decline a major export order and leave nearly 40 per cent of its weaving capacity idle for several weeks.
Industry leaders including CITI Chairman Ashwin Chandran and Southern India Mills' Association (SIMA) Secretary General K Selvaraju have welcomed the duty waiver, describing it as an essential measure to preserve capacity utilisation and maintain international competitiveness. Balancing farmers and exporters While the waiver offers immediate relief for textile manufacturers, it also revives a long-standing policy dilemma. Lower-cost imports can help mills and exporters, but they may also place downward pressure on domestic cotton prices, affecting farmer incomes. This concern explains why the government opted for a temporary window rather than a permanent tariff removal. So far experience show that unrestricted imports during harvest periods can weaken domestic market prices and increase pressure on Minimum Support Price mechanisms. Analysts say, frequent short-term interventions, while effective in addressing immediate shortages, can also encourage speculative stockpiling and create uncertainty across the value chain. Ajay Sahai, Director General of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO), believes the current waiver serves as an emergency support mechanism but also highlights the need for a more predictable long-term tariff framework that aligns the interests of growers and processors.
Long-term productivity takes centre stage
The government's broader strategy extends beyond temporary import relief. The recently approved Mission for Cotton Productivity, backed by the allocation of Rs 5,659 crore over five years, aims to strengthen domestic supply fundamentals through better seeds, modernised ginning infrastructure and targeted agricultural extension services. The programme seeks to increase average cotton yields from 440 kg per hectare to 755 kg per hectare by 2031. Achieving that objective would reduce dependence on imports, improve raw material availability and support India's long-term textile ambitions.
As organised manufacturers invest in automation, higher-count spinning and premium textile production, access to stable and competitively priced cotton will continue to be important for industry growth. The current duty waiver may provide short-term breathing space, but India's ability to achieve its export aspirations will ultimately depend on creating a more productive and predictable cotton ecosystem capable of supporting the entire value chain, from farm to fashion.
Global supply chain strain deepen as fashion brands tighten sourcing costs

The global apparel industry is dealing with growing sourcing tension as big fashion retailers intensify efforts to reduce procurement costs amid slowing consumer demand and persistent macroeconomic volatility. Across Asia’s manufacturing hubs, factories are being forced to absorb rising operational costs while international buyers maintain aggressive pricing expectations supported by advanced procurement technologies and real-time benchmarking systems.
Global fashion brands are now relying heavily on digital procurement platforms that compare supplier costs across countries almost instantly. The strategy allows retailers to protect profit in inflation-hit Western markets, and also reshape the economics of apparel manufacturing by pushing production margins to unsustainable levels.
Cost pressure builds
The financial impact of this shift is becoming visible across supplier networks. Large apparel companies are reducing their average cost per garment even as manufacturers contend with higher wages, energy tariffs, logistics expenses, and compliance costs. A sourcing analysis of Levi Strauss & Co. between July 2024 and April 2026 highlights the scale of the pricing pressure being transferred onto manufacturing partners.
Table: Levi Strauss & Co. Sourcing Performance (Jul 2024- Apr 2026)
|
Sourcing pattern |
Data Point |
|
Initial Weighted-Average FOB Price (Jul 2024 Baseline) |
$8.334/piece |
|
Final Weighted-Average FOB Price (Apr 2026 End Point) |
$7.814/piece |
|
Net Price Reduction per Garment |
-$0.520/piece (-6.2%) |
|
Lowest Price Point Reached (Jan 2026) |
$7.498 /piece |
|
Maximum Squeeze Value vs. Baseline (Jan 2026) |
-$0.836/piece |
|
Annualized Trend Price Decline Rate |
-$0.287/piece per year |
|
Average Sourcing Volume |
3.27 mn pieces/month |
|
Total Sourcing Volume over 22 Months |
71.9 mn pieces |
|
Total Financial Expenditure |
$570 mn |
|
Cumulative Savings Extracted (Pakistan Sourcing Base) |
$30.0 mn |
The data highlights how even modest reductions in unit pricing can translate into significant savings for retailers when applied across millions of garments. For suppliers, however, the same reductions directly reduce already thin margins. Analysts point out, similar procurement practices are now common across denim, basics, sportswear, and fast-fashion categories.
Multi-year erosion
The pressure on manufacturing prices is no longer cyclical but structural. Over the past several years, automated procurement systems and reverse-auction sourcing models have intensified a sustained decline in average free-on-board prices across nearly every major apparel production hub.
Table: Global sourcing cost erosion trends (average per basic garment)
Major sourcing region 2022 Average FOB Price 2024 Average FOB Price 2026 Projected FOB Price Cumulative Change (2022-26)
South Asia (Denim / Wovens) $9.10 / pc $8.33 / pc $7.81 / pc -14.10%
Southeast Asia (Complex Synthetics) $12.50 / pc $11.80 / pc $11.15 / pc -10.80%
East Asia (Fast-Fashion Basicals) $5.40 / pc $4.95 / pc $4.60 / pc -14.80%
Nearshore Hubs (Premium / Speed Sourcing) $14.20 / pc $13.90 / pc $13.55 / pc -4.50%
The steepest margin erosion is concentrated in high-volume commodity categories such as South Asian denim and East Asian fast-fashion basics, where retailers can rapidly shift sourcing allocations between competing countries. Automated benchmarking systems have strengthened buyers’ negotiating leverage by enabling real-time supplier comparisons on cost, speed, and compliance metrics.
Nearshore production hubs such as Mexico and Eastern Europe have seen relatively lower pricing pressure because they compete on logistical advantages rather than pure labor arbitrage. Faster delivery cycles, lower freight exposure, and tariff efficiencies allow these regions to maintain comparatively stronger pricing resilience.
Inflation hits factories
The procurement squeeze is unfolding during a period of higher economic instability for manufacturing economies. Apparel factories across South Asia and Southeast Asia are simultaneously dealing with wage revisions, higher electricity prices, rising borrowing costs, and currency volatility. Freight disruptions linked to instability in the Red Sea and broader geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have further complicated sourcing economics by extending delivery schedules and raising transportation expenses. Suppliers locked into fixed-price contracts often have little room to renegotiate terms once raw material or logistics costs rise.
For many manufacturers, the imbalance is becoming increasingly difficult to manage because global buyers continue to benchmark factories primarily on price competitiveness rather than broader operational investments such as sustainability programs, worker welfare initiatives, or compliance certifications.
Regional divide
While sourcing pressures vary by geography, nearly every major apparel-producing market is experiencing some form of structural strain.
Table: Comparative regional sourcing pressures (2025-26)
Manufacturing hub Market share & volume trends Average labor cost ($/month) Primary overhead headwinds
Bangladesh Dominates EU market (21.57% share); exported $19.4 bn to EU in 2025. $95 Post-political transition transit friction; vulnerability to cotton input price shifts; rising compliance mandates.
Vietnam Top US supplier in 2025 ($9.5 bn Jan-Jul); expanding via EU FTA. $300 High raw material import dependency (up to 70%); higher baseline wages requiring continuous automation spend.
Cambodia Surged 16.5% in 2025 to $11.4 bn; high production utilization. $190 Escalating reliance on external fabric/cotton supply lines; high domestic utility tariffs.
Pakistan High-volume denim niche specialist; contracted via strict buyer limits. Variable (PKR tied) Exchange rates fixed above 278 PKR/$; aggressive energy tariff spikes; extreme localized freight volatility.
The table reflects how sourcing models treat manufacturing countries as interchangeable production nodes despite sharply different economic realities. Bangladesh continues to dominate low-cost, high-volume apparel exports into Europe, while Vietnam’s higher-cost ecosystem is positioning itself as a premium and fast-turnaround supplier. Cambodia and Pakistan, meanwhile, are facing growing vulnerability from energy and logistics volatility.
Despite these distinctions, brands continue to push for lower costs across all regions through reverse-auction procurement systems and automated supplier comparisons.
Procurement paradox
The pressure on factories also raises questions about the long-term sustainability of global fashion’s operating model. Even as retailers extract savings from overseas sourcing networks, many large fashion companies continue to implement restructuring programs and workforce reductions in their domestic markets.
This trend challenges the argument that aggressive procurement strategies are necessary to preserve jobs or fund innovation. Analysts argue that excessive dependence on supplier margin compression may instead reflect deeper structural weaknesses within global retail operations, particularly as discretionary consumer spending slows across North America and Europe. At the same time, factories face growing difficulty maintaining investments in environment upgrades, worker training, and compliance systems when pricing power remains heavily concentrated with buyers.
Supply chain risks
The long-term concern for the industry is that relentless cost competition may weaken the resilience of global supply chains. Apparel manufacturing remains highly sensitive to fluctuations in raw material prices, particularly cotton and synthetic fibers, which account for a substantial share of garment production costs.
When buyers refuse to absorb even limited inflationary increases, suppliers are often forced to reduce spending elsewhere. Industry experts warn that this dynamic risks undermining workplace safety standards, sustainability programs, and overall product quality. As margins narrow further, financially weaker factories could exit the market altogether, increasing the risk of supplier concentration and future sourcing disruptions. In an industry already exposed to geopolitical instability, climate-related disruptions, and freight bottlenecks, the erosion of supplier stability may ultimately create larger operational risks for global brands themselves.
The apparel sector’s sourcing model is therefore entering a critical phase. While procurement automation has delivered short-term financial efficiencies for retailers, the broader supply chain is showing signs of strain that could reshape the economics of fashion manufacturing over the coming decade.
From Voluntary to Mandatory: Asia’s manufacturing hubs lock in green compliance regimes

The multi-billion-dollar Asian apparel export market is entering a enforced sustainability era, where environmental and labour compliance is no longer a corporate voluntary standard but a legal prerequisite for global market access. Across major manufacturing economies, governments are embedding carbon control, circularity mandates, and labour formalisation directly into industrial law, reshaping how apparel sourcing contracts are negotiated, priced, and executed.
In the middle of this shift is the latest ‘Policy Matrix: Asia’ released by the Global Fashion Agenda, which maps regulatory acceleration across eight key production hubs: Bangladesh, China, India, Vietnam, Pakistan, Indonesia, Cambodia, and Turkey. This regulatory merging with Western import regimes, especially EU-driven carbon and due diligence frameworks is effectively dissolving the gap between production geography and compliance geography.
The defining shift is the movement from voluntary ESG alignment to statutory enforcement. Governments are now embedding sustainability directly into industrial operating codes, fundamentally altering cost structures across textile value chains. Rather than incremental CSR adoption, manufacturers face legally binding thresholds on emissions, water usage, chemical discharge, and labour formalisation.
Asia’s regulatory turn
The Policy Matrix outlines a synchronized but uneven wave of reforms across Asia’s apparel production background.
Table: Regulatory mandates across Asia
|
Manufacturing country |
Primary regulatory initiative |
Statutory focus area |
Expected enforcement deadline |
|
India |
New Labour Code |
Wage Standardization & Social Security |
2026-27 Implementation |
|
Turkey |
Comprehensive Climate Law |
Carbon Emissions Trading & Border Tax Shield |
Finalizing 2026 Framework |
|
China |
Textile Recycling Development Plan |
Post-Consumer Sorting & Processing Infrastructure |
Continuous Rollout through 2027 |
|
Indonesia |
Clean Water Act Amendments |
Industrial Wastewater & Chemical Discharge Limits |
Active Enforcement Cycle |
|
Bangladesh |
National Circular Textile Strategy |
Post-Industrial Waste Sourcing & Traceability |
Finalizing 2026 Targets |
|
Vietnam |
Green Trade Agreement Compliance |
Knitwear & Sportswear Circular Supply Systems |
Ongoing Sourcing Alignment |
|
Cambodia |
Key Garment Industry Labor Mandate |
Worker Safety & Regulated Employment Terms |
Continuous Compliance Checks |
|
Pakistan |
Raw Cotton & Bed Linen Standards |
Supply Chain Traceability & Competitive Pricing |
Immediate Export Alignment |
This table reflects a coordinated regulatory increase that ties export eligibility to measurable environmental and labour benchmarks. The financial implications of these reforms are significant. According to the Fashion CFO Agenda 2026, a joint analysis by the Boston Consulting Group and industry partners, climate-linked disruptions have already driven raw material price volatility of up to 2x for cotton and wool. At the same time, upcoming Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) frameworks in Western markets are expected to reduce apparel brand net margins by approximately 4 per cent by 2030 through recycling obligations and end-of-life product accountability.
However, the cost narrative is dual-layered:
• Around 70 per cent of fashion emissions reductions can be achieved at low or even net-negative cost
• Early adopters of circular sourcing models are reporting double-digit revenue growth
• Non-compliant suppliers risk exclusion from EU-aligned procurement pipelines
In effect, compliance is shifting from a cost burden to a market access multiplier.
Circularity becomes industrial policy
A critical evolution in Asian manufacturing policy is the integration of circular economy principles into national industrial strategy rather than environmental policy alone. China’s textile recycling plan, for instance, is not framed as waste management but as industrial upgrading aiming to build automated sorting ecosystems for post-consumer textiles at scale. Similarly, Bangladesh’s circular textile strategy prioritizes traceability and reuse of post-industrial waste as a structural export advantage. Indonesia’s tightening of wastewater regulations is forcing rapid capital expenditure in chemical filtration and closed-loop water systems, particularly across dyeing and finishing clusters that historically operated under lower environmental constraints. Labour formalisation intensifies Labour reform is emerging as the second pillar of regulatory transformation. India’s consolidated labour code is particularly consequential, standardising wage structures and expanding formal social security coverage across a historically fragmented manufacturing base. In Cambodia and Pakistan, labour and traceability reforms are being explicitly linked to export eligibility, signalling a shift from domestic policy to trade enforcement instrument.
Chittagong’s industrial retrofit
The effects of this regulatory convergence are already visible in Bangladesh, the world’s second-largest garment exporter. At the operational level, manufacturers are being forced to align with multi-jurisdictional compliance demands from both domestic regulators and Western buyers.
A leading example is Pacific Jeans Group in Chittagong, which has undergone large-scale infrastructure upgrades to remain contract-eligible for premium global brands. Key interventions include: Installation of advanced effluent treatment systems; water recycling infrastructure reclaiming up to 70 per cent of industrial water use; integration of mechanically recycled post-industrial cotton into denim production. These investments directly address both domestic environmental constraints and EU-linked circularity requirements, effectively de-risking export contracts.
From optional ESG to contract
What is emerging is a new procurement logic: sustainability compliance is becoming a contractual condition rather than a reputational advantage. Global buyers are now embedding regulatory alignment clauses into sourcing agreements, effectively outsourcing compliance enforcement upstream to suppliers. This shift is particularly significant for mid-tier manufacturers, where capital constraints may determine whether firms can access premium export markets.
Outlook 2027 and beyond
By 2027, the Asia manufacturing map is expected to operate under a dual compliance pattern: Domestic regulatory enforcement (carbon, labour, water, recycling); external trade-linked sustainability requirements (EPR, border carbon adjustments, due diligence laws) This will likely boost consolidation in the apparel manufacturing sector, favouring vertically integrated suppliers capable of financing large-scale sustainability infrastructure.
Thus Asia’s apparel export economy is no longer defined solely by labour arbitrage or scale efficiency. It is now being re-engineered around enforceable sustainability architecture. The Policy Matrix developed by the Global Fashion Agenda signals a decisive shift: sustainability is no longer a parallel reporting framework but the operating system of global apparel trade. Manufacturers that can internalize this regulatory shift will not only remain in global supply chains they will define them.








