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The global apparel sector is witnessing a shift from traditional linear models to sophisticated industrial circularity. RE&UP Recycling Technologies, in a strategic alliance with American retailer Madewell and fabric manufacturer ISKO, has successfully transformed approximately 20,000 pairs of post-consumer jeans into high-grade feedstock. This initiative moves beyond experimental pilots, utilizing a feedstock-agnostic process to convert complex polycotton blends into ‘Next-Gen’ cotton and polyester fibers. By deconstructing worn garments at a molecular level, the partnership ensures that recycled content maintains the structural integrity required for premium denim, addressing a long-standing challenge where recycled fibers often compromised fabric strength.

Driving commercial viability

The textile recycling market is projected to reach $6.68 billion in 2026, fueled by a 6.39 per cent CAGR as brands face increasing regulatory pressure to manage end-of-life waste. Closing the loop requires industrial precision, notes Marco Lucietti, Head - Global Marketing, RE&UP. This collaboration serves as a commercial blueprint, proving that large-scale take-back streams can be reintegrated into the supply chain as Global Recycled Standard (GRS) certified fabrics. For ISKO, which holds a 10 per cent global market share in denim materials, the integration of these fibers represents a critical step in meeting the rising demand for eco-friendly textiles, which now accounts for nearly 40 per cent of all denim production.

RE&UP is a circularity-focused venture specializing in high-performance textile-to-textile recycling. Operating within the global apparel supply chain, it converts pre- and post-consumer waste into ‘Next-Gen’ fibers for major brands like PUMA and Madewell. The company aims to scale its proprietary mechanical and thermomechanical processes to meet 2030 global waste reduction targets, maintaining a strong financial outlook driven by the expanding $7.33 billion denim materials market.

  

Himatsingka Seide has initiated a high-level executive realignment to solidify its transition from a home textile specialist to a diversified global apparel and fabric powerhouse. Effective April 9, 2026, the company appointed Gaurav Sharma as President and Business Head for Apparel & Fabric Solutions, alongside Sajjad Mubarak Khan, who will lead Sales for Home Textiles & Yarn Solutions. These appointments occur as the Indian textile sector - which contributes 2.3 per cet to the national GDP- undergoes a major modernization phase fueled by the $1.3 billion PM MITRA integrated textile park scheme.

Navigating trade tailwinds and regional diversification

The leadership overhaul is designed to capitalize on the recently finalized India-UK FTA and the removal of 25 per cent additional ad valorem tariffs by the US in early 2026. With consolidated revenues reaching Rs 2,843 crore in FY2025, the firm is aggressively pursuing a ‘de-risking’ strategy. Management aims to reduce US revenue dependence to under 50 per cent within the next 18 months, favoring high-growth corridors in EMEA and a domestic Indian market projected to contribute Rs 500 crore in incremental revenue by 2027.

Optimizing capacity amidst market premiumization

Under the new leadership, Himatsingka is prioritizing value-added segments to bolster operational margins, which stood at 20.85 per cent last fiscal. By leveraging its world-class spinning plant - currently operating at a staggering 99 per cent capacity utilization - the company is positioning its eight global brands to meet the 20 per cent annual growth observed in the premium athleisure and sustainable fabric categories. This executive shift ensures the infrastructure is primed to convert raw yarn superiority into high-margin retail apparel solutions on a global scale.

A vertically integrated textile major founded in 1985, Himatsingka operates among the world's largest spinning and home textile facilities in Karnataka. Specializing in luxury bedding, yarn, and increasingly apparel fabrics, the firm serves 36 global markets. Currently, the company is executing an asset-light domestic expansion while maintaining a strong ₹2,840 crore revenue base.

  

The industrial landscape of East India reached a significant milestone on April 13, 2026, as Mohan Charan Majhi, Chief Minister, Odisha inaugurated Page Industries’ state-of-the-art apparel unit at Ramdaspur.

This Rs 750 crore facility represents a major tactical shift for the Bengaluru-based textile major, transitioning from its traditional Southern manufacturing strongholds to tap into Odisha’s burgeoning ‘plug-and-play’ infrastructure. The facility is engineered to support a direct workforce of 5,800 employees, primarily targeting the high-growth innerwear and leisurewear segments under the Jockey brand.

Integrated expansion and employment architecture

Simultaneous with the inauguration, the state government formalized the groundwork for a second Page Industries unit at Bhuinpur with an additional investment of Rs 258 crore. This dual-pronged expansion, totaling over Rs 1,008 crore, aligns with the Odisha Apparel and Technical Textiles Policy 2022, which offers a 40 per cent capital investment subsidy. The integration of these units is not merely a capacity addition but a movement toward reverse migration, states Majhi, emphasizing, 90 peer cent of the combined 9,350-person workforce will be domiciled Odias

Competitive dynamics in the global supply Chain

Page Industries, which commands an 18 per cent share of India's organized innerwear market, is utilizing this Odisha hub to mitigate logistics inflation and diversify its production risks. By capitalizing on the state’s lower operational costs and specialized power tariffs, the company aims to sustain its 19–21 per cent EBITDA margin guidance. This project, alongside a concurrent textile plant by MAS India Clothing at the same site, positions Cuttack as a viable competitor to traditional clusters like Tirupur and Surat, particularly as brands seek decentralized, high-efficiency manufacturing nodes.

Page Industries

Page Industries is the exclusive licensee for Jockey International (USA) and Speedo International in India and several neighboring markets. Operating over 15 manufacturing units, the firm maintains a 70–80 per cent in-house production model to ensure vertical integration. With a fiscal 2025 revenue of approximately Rs 5,000 crore and a robust distribution network spanning 1,800 cities, the company is currently pursuing a strategic roadmap to reach a USD 1 billion valuation by 2027 through aggressive Tier II and III city expansion.

  

As the global textile industry grapples with the rapid integration of synthetic design and algorithmic production, ISKO LUXURY by PG is signalling a strategic shift toward human-centric manufacturing. The company’s Fall/Winter 27/28 collection, titled ‘H.A. HUMAN ART,’ debuted at Kingpins Amsterdam today, positioning itself as a ‘creative rebellion’ against the automation of the soul. Under the direction of Paolo Gnutti, the brand is reframing the luxury denim narrative by prioritizing artisanal precision over computational efficiency, arguing that the "imperfection of the manual stroke" is the new benchmark for high-end textiles.

Artistic resilience as a market differentiator

The core of the new collection lies in eight distinct ‘capsule’ interpretations that merge heritage tailoring with sensory innovation. By moving away from purely digital design tools, Gnutti has utilized a comic-book-inspired visual identity to showcase a return to ‘pen and paper’ techniques. This shift is not merely aesthetic but a calculated market positioning that targets brands seeking customization and authenticity. Notable developments include Noble Denim,’ which integrates high-performance wool fibres into traditional denim structures, and "Fur Denim," a textile engineering feat that mimics the texture of pony hair through complex denim weaves.

Collaborative innovation and environmental awareness

Beyond the primary collection, a significant partnership with technology firm SOKO, titled ‘Luxury beyond convention,’ highlights the brand’s focus on sustainable technical evolution. By integrating SOKO’s proprietary Hydrogel, Lumia, and Frost technologies, the collaboration transforms recycled indigo into deep flock surfaces. This partnership underscores a move toward a more essential, powerful denim that balances character with environmental responsibility. This strategic alignment suggests that the future of luxury denim will be defined by a convergence of specialized human vision and sophisticated, low-impact finishing technologies.

  

The Biden administration is set to deepen its engagement with the domestic manufacturing sector as high-ranking trade officials prepare to address the National Council of Textile Organizations’ (NCTO) 22nd Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. On April 16, 2026, Senior Counselor to the President Dr Peter Navarro and Deputy US Trade Representative Ambassador Rick Switzer will outline the federal government’s latest trade agenda. The briefing comes at a critical juncture for an industry that saw $60.9 billion in shipments last year, as policymakers look to tighten the integration of Western Hemisphere supply chains.

Strengthening regional trade hubs under USMCA and CAFTA-DR

A central focus of the summit involves the strategic acceleration of on shoring and nearshoring initiatives. Industry executives and policymakers will examine how existing frameworks, specifically the USMCA and CAFTA-DR, can be leveraged to insulate the textile supply chain from global volatility. With US fibre, textile, and apparel exports reaching $27 billion in 2025, the discussions aim to refine government procurement rules and ‘Made in America’ mandates. These policy levers are increasingly viewed as essential for sustaining the nearly 453,000 jobs currently supported by the domestic textile workforce.

Capital investment and the future of domestic production

The meet also serves as a platform to evaluate the long-term viability of recent industrial investments. Following a year where capital expenditures for textile and apparel production hit $5.5 billion, the industry is transitioning toward more specialized, high-value manufacturing. While Chuck Hall, Chairman, NCTO will open the session with a state-of-the-industry report, the presence of top-tier federal counsellors indicates a shift toward more aggressive trade enforcement and market positioning. This alignment between private sector leadership and the executive branch underscores a unified effort to protect domestic interests against shifting global trade dynamics.

  

The technical textiles sector is approaching a critical juncture as the industry’s reliance on subjective human expertise faces the dual pressures of a shrinking specialist workforce and a global push for manufacturing consistency. For decades, the ‘handle’ or feel of a fabric - a vital indicator of performance for engineered materials - has been judged by touch, a method notoriously difficult to scale or standardize. To bridge this gap, Roaches International has unveiled Sentire, a digital evaluation system designed to replace anecdotal descriptions with verifiable data, set for its public debut at the TechTextile exhibition in Frankfurt this April.

Standardizing tactility through precision physics

Developed in collaboration with specialists from the University of Leeds, the sentire system functions as a digital ‘fingerprint’ for fabric properties. Much like the spectrophotometer revolutionized the industry by creating a universal language for color, this new technology translates physical sensations -such as smoothness, stiffness, and creasability - into communicable data points. By employing four specific test methods that mimic the nuances of human touch, the system allows manufacturers to compare batches and verify performance across complex, global supply chains without the variance of individual interpretation.

Strengthening global supply chain resilience

Beyond simple quality control, the shift toward quantifiable metrics addresses a significant logistical bottleneck in technical textile production. By integrating real-time monitoring, the system enables manufacturers to detect subtle variations caused by coatings, finishes, or laundering processes during early production stages. This data-driven approach aims to minimize material waste and costly rework, contributing to a more resource-efficient sector. According to the British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA), such innovations are essential for maintaining a resilient supply chain, ensuring that high-value yarns and finished technical fabrics meet stringent performance standards through automated, forensic inspection.

  

HM finds growth below revenue line as margin discipline pays off JPG

 

H&M Group’s latest quarter signals a decisive shift in global fast fashion: scale is no longer the primary reason for success. In a quarter marked by cautious consumer demand, store rationalisation and currency headwinds, the Swedish retailer delivered a sharp earnings recovery by prioritising cost control, inventory productivity and better full-price sell-through.

For the first quarter ended February 2026, H&M reported a 26 per cent year-on-year rise in operating profit to SEK 1.51 billion, even as sales in local currencies slipped 1 per cent and its store network remained around 4 per cent smaller than a year ago. Gross margin grew 160 basis points to 50.7 per cent, supported by lower markdown costs and stronger buying discipline. The numbers reinforce a reset underway under CEO Daniel Ervér: H&M is increasingly choosing margin quality over topline aggression.

Stock discipline in focus The clearest evidence of this shift lies in inventory. H&M reduced stock-in-trade by 16 per cent during the quarter to SEK 34.6 billion, bringing inventory to 15.6 per cent of rolling 12-month sales versus 17.4 per cent a year earlier. For a retailer long pressured by excess stock and promotional dependency, this is more than balance-sheet housekeeping it is a direct margin lever.

Lower inventory has sharply reduced forced discounting, enabling the company to improve realised pricing without leaning on aggressive markdowns to clear seasonal merchandise. In effect, inventory hygiene is now acting as a profit engine. The margin growth to 50.7 per cent validates this approach. It suggests consumers are responding better to a tighter, more curated product mix, allowing H&M to protect price architecture in a segment increasingly disrupted by ultra-fast fashion discounting.

Store pruning, not store expansion

The bigger message is that H&M’s recovery is being built on a smaller operational footprint. With the store base down around 4 per cent year-on-year, management is signalling a clear preference for productivity-led retail over indiscriminate expansion. Underperforming locations are being phased out, while capital is being redirected toward premium flagships, stronger digital integration and higher-traffic hubs.

This is a shift from the legacy fast-fashion playbook that once rewarded store count growth as the dominant valuation metric. Instead, H&M is rebuilding around relevance per square foot. That becomes especially critical as the company faces pressure from both ends of the market, Shein’s ultra-low-cost model at the entry level and Zara’s increasingly premiumised fashion positioning at the aspirational end.

Speed and agility the new growth engine

The supply chain is emerging as the structural backbone of the turnaround. Management has doubled down on shorter decision cycles, closer supplier coordination and higher in-season buying flexibility. CEO Daniel Ervér has emphasised faster decision-making paths and a simplified operating structure that allows product choices to move closer to real-time customer demand. This matters because fashion risk today is no longer just trend risk, it is timing risk.

By increasing the share of inventory bought in season, H&M is reducing the forecasting errors that traditionally lead to margin-dilutive discounting. The strategy also improves responsiveness to local demand shifts, climate variation and rapidly changing social-media-driven trends. In effect, speed is now as important as style.

Table: The margin reset by the numbers

Metric

Q1 FY26

What it signals

Operating Profit

SEK 1.51 bn (+26%)

Strong cost control despite weak demand

Gross Margin

50.7% (+160 bps)

Lower markdowns, better realised pricing

Inventory

-16% YoY

Improved stock turns and capital efficiency

Store Base

4% lower

Shift to high-productivity retail hubs

The table underscores the central investment thesis around H&M’s recovery: profit is improving faster than revenue momentum. Operating profit growth of 26 per cent on negative local-currency sales indicates the company is extracting more earnings from every unit of inventory, every square foot of retail space and every sourcing cycle. This is the kind of below-the-revenue-line improvement equity markets tend to reward, provided it proves durable.

The real test is brand heat, not just better math

Yet the quarter also leaves investors with an unresolved question: can operational excellence alone reignite sustainable growth? While March sales are expected to rise 1 per cent in local currencies, the broader topline remains soft, reflecting cautious consumption and persistent competitive pressure. That makes the next phase of the H&M story less about cost discipline and more about desirability.

A leaner inventory base and tighter supply chain can protect margins, but long-term valuation expansion will depend on whether consumers see a tangible step-up in fashion relevance, quality and brand aspiration. For now, H&M appears comfortable trading sales volume for pricing integrity and return ratios. In a market once obsessed with store growth and SKU velocity, the retailer is making a different bet: fewer products, fewer stores, but stronger economics. The quarter suggests that bet is beginning to work.

  

As Europe cuts orders India sees a rare export window post FTA

 

The sharp dip in EU apparel imports is not, at first glance, the kind of headline exporters celebrate. January’s 15.48 per cent fall in EU apparel imports to €7.03 billion signals a consumer market under stress, where retailers are buying less, paying less, and pushing suppliers into a brutal margin war. Yet for India’s apparel exporters, this downturn may paradoxically mark the most strategic opening in a decade.

The reason lies in timing. Europe’s slowdown is arriving just as the India-EU Free Trade Agreement resets the landed-cost equation in India’s favor. With duties of up to 10-12 per cent on apparel and textiles effectively moving to zero across almost the full tariff universe, India is no longer entering Europe with a built-in price handicap. In a shrinking market, share gains matter more than absolute demand growth. That is where the FTA transforms a weak macro environment into a strategic sourcing opportunity.

From tariff disadvantage to price parity

For years, Indian exporters operated in Europe with an invisible tax on competitiveness. While Bangladesh benefited from preferential access and Turkey monetized geographic proximity, India’s exporters had to absorb tariff friction that often made them 8-12 per cent more expensive on a landed basis. The new FTA eliminates that structural drag. Government and industry estimates suggest the agreement opens a $263.5 billion EU textile and apparel import market with zero-duty access, correcting the disadvantage India historically faced against Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Turkey.

This matters even more in today’s demand environment. Europe’s retailers are clearly consolidating suppliers, rewarding either extreme price efficiency or differentiated value. India can now compete in both areas. At the mass-market end, duty removal gives Indian cotton basics, knitwear, denim, and value fashion immediate landed-cost relief. In categories where buyers are forcing annual price resets, even a mid-single-digit cost edge can decide the sourcing shift.

At the premium end, India’s strengths in organic cotton, MMF blends, embroidery, occasionwear, and artisanal textiles become commercially stronger because the tariff wedge no longer dilutes premium realization.

What the EU import stats means for India

Earlier EU imports data showed China defending share through price aggression, Bangladesh suffering a sharp demand squeeze, Turkey shifting toward higher-value categories, and Pakistan sacrificing price for volume. For India, that data is less a snapshot of competitors and more a sourcing map of where orders can migrate next.

Table: EU apparel import performance (Jan 2026 vs Jan 2025)

Country

Value (€ mn)

Growth value

Volume growth (kg)

Unit price growth

World

7,033.60

-15.48%

-8.36%

-7.76%

China

2,224.89

-6.90%

+1.21%

-8.01%

Bangladesh

1,428.91

-25.25%

-17.49%

-9.41%

Turkey

619.98

-29.12%

-31.66%

+3.72%

Vietnam

362.86

-7.34%

-13.00%

+6.50%

Pakistan

288.81

-17.06%

+49.01%

-44.34%

Bangladesh’s 25.25 per cent export decline to the EU is particularly relevant. Much of that business sits in core basics viz, T-shirts, innerwear, fleece, kidswear, and entry-level woven bottoms segments where India’s integrated cotton ecosystem and large-scale garment clusters can now compete more effectively post-FTA.

Turkey’s premium shift creates another opening. As Turkish factories move further up the value curve, parts of the mid-premium fashion volume they leave behind especially fashion knits, embroidered women’s wear, and occasion-led collections could increasingly flow toward Indian hubs such as Tiruppur, Noida, Jaipur, and Surat. The table, therefore, suggests India’s biggest opportunity is not broad-based EU demand recovery. It is order displacement from stressed competitors.

The new India playbook: Tiruppur to Surat

The FTA’s commercial effect will not be evenly distributed across India. The biggest winners are likely to be export clusters already capable of speed, compliance, and scale. Tiruppur stands to gain first from knitwear migration, especially in cotton-rich basics and sustainable loungewear programs, where Europe’s value chains are consolidating around fewer strategic partners. Exporters there are already positioning the FTA as a demand accelerator after a difficult period of US tariff volatility.

Noida and Bengaluru could benefit from fashion-forward woven garments and fast replenishment women’s wear, particularly as EU buyers rebalance away from China-centric sourcing. Surat’s MMF and synthetic dress materials ecosystem may see a parallel opportunity as Europe’s occasion and value-fashion segments seek lower-cost alternatives to Turkish and Chinese polyester blends. For home textiles, Panipat, Karur, and Welspun-led ecosystems gain a direct landed-cost boost in a category where European retailers remain margin-obsessed.

But the real battle is no longer price alone

The FTA gives India the entry ticket. It does not guarantee market share. Europe’s demand slowdown is increasingly linked factors like: ESG regulation, textile waste rules, digital product passports, traceability, and anti-greenwashing scrutiny. Suppliers winning the next sourcing cycle will need compliance architecture as much as manufacturing depth.

This is where India’s opportunity becomes more sophisticated than simple tariff arbitrage. The exporters that can combine zero-duty access with recycled content, clean documentation, water traceability, and faster replenishment cycles will capture outsized gains.

The draft origin rules under the FTA also offer practical flexibility, allowing tolerance thresholds for non-originating inputs in several textile categories. That improves supply-chain planning for exporters using imported specialty yarns, trims, or technical fabrics while still qualifying for preferential access. In effect, the FTA turns compliance excellence into a monetizable margin lever.

Why 2026 could be India’s share-gain year

Industry projections now suggest India’s textile and apparel exports to Europe could rise 20-25 per cent annually once the FTA is operationalized, with some estimates projecting a doubling of exports to over $11 billion in five years. What makes this realistic is not a booming Europe. It is a weak Europe forcing retailer rationalization.

When buyers cut vendor bases, they typically reward suppliers that offer geopolitical stability, fiber diversity, large domestic raw material ecosystems, and increasing ESG readiness. India now checks all four boxes more convincingly than it did even 12 months ago. That makes 2026 less about chasing Europe’s declining import bill and more about capturing a bigger slice of a smaller pie.

The irony of the current market is striking. Europe’s fashion demand is cooling, but India’s export opportunity is heating up. The FTA has arrived at precisely the moment when global brands are reassessing overdependence on China, questioning Bangladesh’s resilience in basics, and paying closer attention to supply-chain transparency. In that environment, India does not need Europe to grow fast. It only needs Europe to reshuffle suppliers. And January’s import table suggests that reshuffle has already begun.

  

Knitwear capital of India, Tiruppur, is currently contending with a complex landscape as regional instability in West Asia threatens the momentum of its export recovery. While the district recorded a resilient 11.7 per cent growth in ready-made garment (RMG) exports during the initial quarter of the fiscal year - reaching approximately $1.42 billion - market stakeholders caution that escalating logistics costs and demand volatility in Europe and the U.S. present immediate operational hurdles. Freight rates have surged significantly, with some shipping routes experiencing cost increases of up to 400 per cent, complicating margin retention for small and medium-scale exporters.

Logistics volatility and cost inflation

Beyond shipping disruptions, the industry faces a sharp rise in input costs, with chemicals and man-made fiber (MMF) prices ascending by nearly 20 per cent. Energy security has also emerged as a critical concern; coal prices have spiked by 80 per cent, while a shortage of commercial LPG is impacting the communal hostel facilities that house the region’s massive migrant workforce. These factors have prompted industry bodies like the Tiruppur Exporters’ Association (TEA) to seek urgent policy interventions, including the restructuring of stressed financial accounts and the expansion of working capital limits to bridge liquidity gaps.

Technological resilience as a competitive edge

To mitigate these external pressures, Tiruppur is accelerating its transition toward Industry 4.0. Manufacturers are increasingly adopting automated cutting and AI-driven quality control systems, which have demonstrated the potential to reduce defect rates from 12 per cent to below 4 per cent. This technological shift is not merely about cost reduction; it is a strategic necessity to meet the stringent sustainability and ethical compliance standards now demanded by global retailers. By shortening production cycles from 40 days to under 28, the cluster aims to maintain its competitive advantage against rivals like Vietnam and Bangladesh.

Tiruppur functions as India’s premier hub for cotton knitwear, contributing roughly 54 per cent of the country’s total knitwear exports. Historically a cluster of small-scale dyeing units, it has evolved into a sophisticated manufacturing base specializing in T-shirts, sweatshirts, and innerwear for global brands. The sector aims for a 15 per cent CAGR targeting a total export value of $5.5 billion (Rs 46,000 crore) by the end of the 2025-2026 period through market diversification and increased focus on sustainable, value-added apparel.

  

Tiruppur-based SP Apparels (SPAL) has finalized a fresh equity investment of Rs 6.02 crore ($650,000) into its wholly-owned Sri Lanka-based subsidiary, SP Apparels International. Completed on April 9, 2026, this capital infusion marks the second significant round of funding for the unit within six months, following a Rs 4.35 crore infusion in late 2025. The move is designed to leverage Sri Lanka’s specialized manufacturing landscape and competitive labor costs to optimize SPAL’s global supply chain. By scaling up this overseas facility, the company aims to enhance its export agility, particularly for its core infant and childrenswear categories, which demand high-precision knitting and finishing capabilities.

Scaling toward the Rs 2,000 crore revenue milestone

The strategic expansion in Sri Lanka aligns with SPAL’s ambitious ‘Vision 2027’ roadmap, which targets a consolidated revenue of Rs 2,000 crore. Current financial data underscores a robust trajectory; the company reported a 6.6 per cent revenue growth in Q3 FY26, supported by the successful integration of Young Brand Apparel - an intimate wear specialist acquired for Rs 223 crore. Analysts suggest, diversifying production across regional hubs allows SPAL to mitigate the impact of fluctuating artisanal production costs and domestic yarn volatility. With the garment division now exporting nearly 19 million pieces quarterly, the Sri Lankan unit is positioned as a critical lever for maintaining the company's competitive edge in the high-volume UK and US retail markets.

Global manufacturing and retail profile

SP Apparels is a leading Indian manufacturer specializing in knitted garments for infants and children for global retailers. The company manages a diverse portfolio including the Crocodile menswear brand and Natalia women’s wear. With integrated facilities in Tamil Nadu and expanding hubs in Sri Lanka, SPAL is targeting Rs 2,000 crore in revenue by FY27 through aggressive capacity scaling and international DTC growth.

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