Eclat Textile, a major Taiwanese technology-based textile company, which is a fabric producer of professional functional and flexible knitwear and apparel manufacturer, is to enhance its production capacity in Vietnam, to gain benefits from Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade pact.
The company, which has clients such Nike and Adidas is to invest $50.5 million to upgrade two factories. Of this, $40 million will go to a factory in Ba Ria-Vung Tau Province and $10.5 million to a plant in Dong Nai province and construction will begin early next year. The expanded capacity will top 5 million pieces of clothing per month.
To obtain maximum yield to satisfy customer demands, Eclat uses the most professional manpower, has the swiftest response and most competitive cost.
The first garment factory was opened by Eclat Textile Co., Ltd (Vietnam), in 2005 in Vietnam. The company has three garment factories in Ho Chi Minh City and the surrounding area and it opened its own fabric mill in Ho Chi Minh City in 2008.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement, which has been done by 11 countries and Vietnam, promises to eliminate all tariffs on Vietnamese seafood and apparel exports to large markets such as the US and Japan.
www.eclat.com.tw
Expotextil is on at Peru, October 22 to 25. Participants from over 20 countries will attend with the aim of offering their products and services such as equipment, textiles, supplies, tools, apparel, software and several accessories.
Exhibits include fiber preparation machines, knitting machines, spinning machines, testing equipment, weaving machines, non-woven and industrial machines, knitted and elastic textile fabrics, fancy yarn, wool, hemp and cotton yarn. garment yarn, decorative yarn, blended yarn, elastic yarn, special fiber yarn. The exhibition includes machinery and equipment for the clothing and textile industries, equipment for textile finishing, cutting and laser engraving, industrial sewing machines and more.
The fair will gather 220 exhibitors, who belong to companies from Peru, Germany, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, South Korea, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Spain and the United States.
The fair brings together manufacturers and suppliers for the textile and apparel industry. The event is an opportunity to develop business relationships with companies, buyers, sales representatives and strategic partners, both domestic and international.
A total of 18 lectures will be given by national and international experts, who will put the latest textile industry developments on display. Visitors will be able to appreciate the newest garments produced by entrepreneurs and designers.
expotextilperu.com
Between 2009 and 2014 Sri Lanka’s clothing exports grew by over 51 per cent. And further growth is possible. The industry has built up a reputation for quality and delivery among buyers in the markets of developed countries.
Also, the industry has been a pioneer in adopting environmentally friendly manufacturing and waste management methods, something other countries in the region have yet to make progress on.
The country has created an environment conducive to business and provided tax incentives to encourage foreign direct investment. The clothing industry hopes to secure higher exports to the European Union through the restoration of GSP Plus concessions. Such restoration would provide exports from Sri Lanka with tariff-free access to EU markets and could lead to a sizeable increase in clothing shipments.
However there is a possibility Sri Lanka’s competitive position in the crucial US market will be threatened by the Trans-Pacific Partnership treaty, which is expected to favor Vietnam and Malaysia.
Also if GSP Plus status in the EU market is not restored, Sri Lanka’s clothing producers would remain at a long-term disadvantage in the face of competitors from Pakistan, Bangladesh or Cambodia who do benefit from duty-free access to the EU.
The PPP government in Sindh was slammed by the value-added textile manufacturers-cum-exporters recently, for letting industries suffer with decaying infrastructure, dwindling water and power supplies.
Abdul Rasheed, Chairman, Pakistan Hosiery Manufacturers and Exporters Association (PHMA), while speaking at a meeting with Sindh Industries Minister Muhammad Ali Malkani at PHMA House, said that Karachi was being ignored by the PPP government and not included in its development plans. This was despite the city providing more than 63 per cent revenue to the national economy.
Rasheed said that political governments are busy catering to their vote banks and meanwhile the industries were suffering from the broken infrastructure despite being vital to the national exchequer. He added that Karachi was treated as an orphan; however, the situation had improved quite a lot since the last few months.
Rasheed said that the provincial taxes needed a consolidation to help facilitate the industrial taxpayers and were uncounted. He also blamed the government for numerous taxes and stated that the manifold taxation system had been kept intact just to protect the bureaucracy. Besides, he mentioned that the social security audit was just harassment to the exporters by the government.
Javed Bilwani, Chief Coordinator, PHMA, feels that the government should allow 10 other power distributing companies in the city to end the K-Electric monopoly. He even urged the government to introduce an incentive package for the industrial growth and that it should build a circular railway network for people to end the transportation woes.
Moreover, Bilwani termed the federal government's imposition of 10 per cent, regularity duty on cotton yarn import and said that it was an illegal imposition in line with international laws.
www.phmaonline.com
Pakistan’s textile industry exports have dropped both in quantity and value terms in the month of September 2015.
One of the major reasons is the high cost of energy, both gas and electricity. This has hindered the industry’s capacity to produce an exportable surplus. Once uninterrupted energy is available the industry is confident it can make up for the shortfall by bringing its dormant and impaired capacities back on production track.
The fall in basic textile exports has been more steep than the fall in apparel exports in quantity terms. Yarn exports dropped by 14.5 per cent. Cloth exports fell by 22.43 per cent, yarn other than cotton yarn by 11.9 per cent, bed wear by nine per cent, tents and canvas by 79 per cent, and art, silk and synthetic textiles by 67 per cent in quantity terms. Apparel exports were down by 11.49 per cent in readymade garments and 4.3 per cent in knitwear in spite of the GSP Plus facility.
About 70 per cent of Pakistan’s textile industry is located in the province of Punjab. The industry has been facing an unprecedented declining trend in exports over the last one year. It wants measures to be implemented by the government that will help it become viable.
The Union Ministry of Textiles has been urged to facilitate opening of common selling offices or facilitation centres in China by the Indian Texpreneurs Federation (ITF).
D Prabhu Dhamodharan Federation Secretary, in a memorandum to the Ministry Secretary S K Panda, said that in recent times, the Chinese yarn buyers and traders, collectively, have been crushing the Indian yarn manufacturers, making this move necessary.
Indian spinners could open and operate common selling offices or facilitation centres in China to counter the Chinese onslaught. This would encourage close interaction among Indian industrialists and prevent buyers from exploiting them. Besides, this would strengthen the Indian buyers’ position with constant market intelligence.
The Ministry only needs to facilitate it as industry stakeholders would bear all expenses. Dhamodharan feels that the Ministry should initiate textile-specific agreements quickly for untapped markets instead of waiting for mega trade agreements to be signed. He also said that a strong recommendation to the Commerce Ministry is necessary to speed up the process.
Rationalisation of duties on man-made fibre for Indian products to compete in the international market is another point mentioned in the memorandum. Dhamodharan believes that this was the only way to achieve the targeted growth in the export market. Continuous decrease in export of MMF goods and increase in imports of MMF-based products clearly indicate international trends. Intervention on duty rationalisation cannot be delayed any further, he stated.
Dhamodharan averred that interest subvention for export of yarn and fabrics will boost exports and support the domestic market.
www.itf.org.in
For the September quarter Welspun India’s profits rose by 32.7 per cent. Welspun India is the world's third largest home textile manufacturer.
The debt-equity ratio has been brought down to 1.8:1. The company wants to bring this down to 1.4:1 by the end of this fiscal year. Retail sales grew 35 per cent. Net sales rose 6.3 per cent. The lower sales were the result of high base effect in the year ago period, when it had the best sales turnover.
The company hopes to maintain a revenue guidance of 15 per cent rise and a profit guidance of over 22 per cent for the rest of the fiscal year. The ongoing vertical integration at the company’s Vapi and Anjar plants are expected to result in better realisations and margins.
Welspun India targets to reach an annual turnover of 2.5 billion dollars, more than double the current figure, by the turn of the decade. The company has a current capacity of 50,000 tons of towels per annum, 60,000 million meters of sheets, 15,000 tons of rugs and carpets per annum.
Welspun is a contract manufacturer for some of the world’s largest retailers and nets more than 65 per cent of its revenue from the US market.
www.welspunindia.com
All the apparel production units and stalls/sales outlets selling apparels have been asked by Mariam Baldev, Joint Commissioner of Commercial Tax to compulsorily obtain the registration certificate.
While interacting with the apparel manufacturers and traders recently, Baldev said that if at all any units do not have it, the officials in their department could assist them to get the registration certificates within 48 hours. However, this would be only if they have the requisite documents in their possession.
There was some minor friction between the commercial tax officials and the apparel manufacturers after the officials conducted inspections at units and sales outlets. This is when the discussions gained significance. The manufacturers alleged that the officials were asking for levy of extra/excessive amount from them and also harassing them.
Baldev said that anybody who had any kind of complaint could approach her in person and the grievances would be addressed on its merit. No one would stop the vehicles for a prolonged period, said the tax officials; however, this would be the case only when apparel manufacturers would keep all the papers ready while transporting the garments to the buyers’ destination.
India’s share in the global apparel trade is unlikely to increase significantly over the long term. Structural challenges which constrain the industry need to be addressed.
The fragmented nature of the industry, low levels of modernisation, high costs of production and a limited presence in man-made fiber apparels are the main factors which have constrained the growth in India’s apparel exports.
The share of India in the global apparel trade is just four per cent despite the fact that India is one of the world’s largest cotton producers with the world’s second largest spinning and weaving capacity. Countries with benefits of economies of scale and abundant availability of cheap labor, such as China, Bangladesh and Vietnam, have been able to garner a larger share in global apparel exports over the last decade.
India is the world’s sixth largest apparel exporter after China, Bangladesh, Italy, Germany and Vietnam. Downstream sectors in the textile industry like weaving, processing and garmenting have not been able to derive benefits from the government’s Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme.
When it comes to yarn, most spinning mills are facing a working capital crunch since they have yet to get subsidies and incentives under the focus market scheme have been withdrawn.
Some of the important global companies from the denim business such as Gap, Levis,Uniqlo, H&M, S.Oliver, Li & Fung, HEMA , Hermes , OTTO , O'stin, Inditex, Mondial , New Times, Next, Perry Ellis, PVH , Redpoint, Espirit among many others were among the visiting companies. Most of the reputed garment factories from Bangladesh also made their presence felt during the show.
First used as a fabric for workwear, denim is now facing a threat from the new-found ‘Athleisure’ trend, as experts point out. But denim has survived and triumphed many such challenges over decades and the challenge has continuously raised the bar of this versatile fabric pushing the denim players to continuously experiment and innovate. The more they stretched their imagination, the fabric evolved.
So the fourth edition of the event took inspiration from ‘Denim Players’, with the theme aptly selected as ‘Denim Playground’, where exhibitors from around the world showcase their sporty innovations. Exhibitors from 28 companies were quite happy with the results they achieved from the show, with many more exhibitors expressing their interest to participate. The playground theme of was well appreciated by the visitors and exhibitors.
‘FASHIONIM’ - the denim fashion show was a huge success with about 400 invitees attending the same. The presentation of collections by Vicunha Brazil, Envoy Bangladesh and Bhaskar India were highly appreciated by the audience.
Various brain-storming sessions and seminars during the ‘Denim Playgrond’ included profitable and environmentally sustainable denim washing organized by technical partners GIZ. Another one ‘Bridging research in cellulose chemistry for denim applications’ by Christian Schimpher from Acticell, Austria and the ‘Re-definition of Denim’ by Zafer Bozdag , Turkey were also held during the show.
Denimsandjeans.com also announced the launch of their unique online initiative – ‘De-Brands’ online show at http://onlineshow.denimsandjeans.com/: the first of its kind online global denim show. The event also organized a competition among the students of Bangladesh fashion universities and students from three universities - NIFT, BUFT and SMUCT participated in the same. 10 finalist students came out with amazing designs considering that it was their first exposure to such products. Three of the students were awarded the trophies for the best designs.
www.denimsandjeans.com
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