Fashion
India’s Raymond Lifestyle Ltd’s Q2 FY26 revenue rises 8% to $211.5 mn
EBITDA rose 7 per cent YoY to ₹259 crore (~$29.37 million), maintaining a margin of 13.9 per cent. This was achieved despite a deliberate increase in advertising expenditure—a strategic investment aimed at strengthening long-term brand equity and enhancing consumer engagement.
Raymond Lifestyle Limited has reported an increase of 8 per cent YoY in Q2 FY26 revenue to ₹1,865 crore (~$211.52 million), driven by robust domestic demand.
EBITDA grew 7 per cent to ₹259 crore (~$29.37 million) with a 13.9 per cent margin.
Branded Textile revenue rose 10 per cent, while Branded Apparel grew 11 per cent.
Strong home market demand offset export challenges from US tariffs.
This growth in EBITDA reflects not only the higher sales volume generated by the resilient Indian consumer but also the benefit of an improved product mix, scale benefit and better operating leverage combined with selective pruning of under-performing stores. The company effectively capitalised on buoyant domestic sentiment, Raymond said in a press release.
The profit before tax (PBT) stood at ₹108 crore compared to ₹112 crore in Q2 FY25, while the company’s total income for H1 FY26 reached ₹3,340 crore, up 12 per cent YoY. The company’s net debt was ₹246 crore as of September 2025, attributed to inventory build-up for the festive and wedding seasons.
However, the growth in domestic consumption and its sales was partly offset, as its international business, particularly the garmenting and B2B export segments, faced considerable headwinds. The imposition of steep US tariffs significantly impacted the company’s global competitiveness, leading to order deferrals and margin pressure from key overseas buyers. Despite this external challenge, the powerful rebound in domestic consumption fully cushioned the impact, allowing it to post positive overall growth.
Branded Textile segment revenue grew by 10 per cent to ₹937 crore in Q2 FY26 vs ₹854 crore in Q2 FY25 mainly on account of robust volume growth, higher wedding dates and increased consumer awareness as compared to the previous year. EBITDA grew by 16 per cent to ₹188 crore in Q2 FY26 as compared to ₹161 crore in Q2FY25, with EBITDA margin of 20 per cent in Q2 FY26 vs 18.9 per cent in Q2 FY25 on account of improved product mix and strong volume growth.
Branded Apparel segment revenue stood at ₹491 crore in Q2 FY26 as compared to ₹441 crore in the same quarter last year, reflecting a growth of 11 per cent YoY. The growth was witnessed across all brands and key channels such as Large Format Stores (LFS), Exclusive Brand Outlets (EBO), Multi-Brand Outlets (MBO) and online. The segment reported an EBITDA of ₹25 crore in Q2 FY26 as compared to ₹57 crore in Q2 FY25 with an EBITDA margin of 5.2 per cent in Q2 FY26 vs 13 per cent in Q2 FY25.
As of September 30, 2025, the company’s store count stood at 1,663, compared to 1,592 a year earlier. The newly opened stores were expected to take additional time to reach full maturity.
Garmenting segment reported revenue at ₹269 crore in Q2 FY26 as compared to ₹260 crore in the same quarter previous year, reflecting a growth of 4 per cent YoY. EBITDA margin for the quarter was 5.4 per cent in Q2 FY26 vs 9.6 per cent in Q2 FY25.
The High Value Cotton Shirting segment recorded revenue of ₹212 crore in Q2 FY26, down 7 per cent YoY from ₹228 crore in Q2 FY25 due to subdued demand. EBITDA rose to ₹25 crore from ₹22 crore in the same period last year, with margins improving to 11.8 per cent from 9.7 per cent, primarily driven by a better product mix, added the release.
“Our quarterly performance reflects encouraging momentum driven by a strong domestic demand across core lifestyle categories. Even as we navigate global macroeconomic headwinds, we remain focused on agility and strategic foresight—closely tracking opportunities from the UK-India Free Trade Agreement and potential risks from US tariff changes. This disciplined approach ensures we continue creating enduring value for all stakeholders,” said Gautam Hari Singhania, executive chairman of Raymond Lifestyle Limited.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
China rolls out tariff cuts on Congo imports from April 1
The measure implements tariff reduction commitments made under the ‘Early Harvest Arrangement of the Agreement on Economic Partnership for Shared Development’ between the two countries.
China will implement preferential tariff rates on selected imports from the Republic of the Congo starting April 1 under the Early Harvest Arrangement of their economic partnership agreement.
The move announced by the Customs Tariff Commission, is aimed at fulfilling tariff reduction commitments, enhancing bilateral trade cooperation and advancing long-term economic ties between the two countries.
The commission said the move is in line with China’s tariff law and reflects the country’s continued efforts to expand opening-up and strengthen trade ties with African partners.
Officials stated that the preferential tariff treatment will help deepen bilateral economic and trade cooperation and support the development of a higher-level community with a shared future between China and the Republic of the Congo.
The Early Harvest Arrangement, signed in November 2025, marked the first such agreement of its kind between China and an African country, paving the way for broader market access and phased tariff reductions.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (JP)
Fashion
More risk from Iran war to Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka: S&P Global
These countries are particularly vulnerable to rising oil prices and potential supply disruptions, it noted in a recent article.
The Iran war poses a greater risk to Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and to a lesser extent Laos, due to their high dependence on imported energy and limited reserves, S&P Global Ratings said.
These countries are particularly vulnerable to rising oil prices and potential supply disruptions.
All four governments are likely to see significant credit metric deteriorations, if the conflict is prolonged.
In our base case scenario, the war is unlikely to have a material impact on our sovereign ratings on these countries, but a more prolonged price and supply shock in global energy markets could cause more pronounced credit damage.
Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh are showing signs of economic recovery. The three countries have made progress, but sustained high energy prices and potential disruptions to trade and remittances could derail their fragile economies.
S&P Global Ratings believes the higher-income Asia-Pacific (APAC) economies are better placed to weather temporary disruptions to oil and gas supply from the Middle East.
Even where they are highly dependent on imported energy, they generally have more significant oil reserves to meet the shortfall in imports. They also have financial resources to acquire available supply in the spot oil and gas markets to secure needed energy, the rating agency noted.
Lower-income economies in the region do not enjoy such flexibility. The sovereign ratings on some may face pressure if the supply disruption persists longer than our assumptions. Bangladesh, Laos, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are among this group. These economies have one thing in common: a high dependence on imported energy products.
The Middle East war is likely to have a more severe impact on these economies, due to their fuel import bills, and generally weaker fiscal and external reserves to withstand supply shortages and high oil prices.
Among the four sovereigns, Laos is likely to fare better due to the dominance of hydropower in its energy mix.
Bangladesh, with government revenues at only around 9 per cent of gross domestic product, has fewer options to cap electricity and fuel prices through fiscal means.
All four governments are likely to see significant credit metric deteriorations, through inflation and currency channels, if the Middle East conflict is prolonged. However, the impact on the agency’s ratings on these sovereigns may be limited, as the generally low rating levels have already captured a significant share of the risks.
S&P Global Ratings’ base case for the Middle East war assumes that elevated hostilities will persist into early April, with the Strait of Hormuz facing material disruptions.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
EU Parliament members set conditions for lowering tariffs on US items
On July 27, 2025, in Turnberry, Scotland, US President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen reached a deal on tariff and trade issues, outlined in a joint statement published on August 25.
EU Parliament members have adopted their position on two proposals implementing the tariff aspects of the EU-US Turnberry trade deal.
The texts, if agreed with EU members, will eliminate most tariffs on US industrial goods and offer preferential market access for many US seafood and agricultural goods.
The members strengthened the proposed suspension clause, and introduced ‘sunrise’ and ‘sunset’ clauses.
The texts, if agreed with EU member states, will eliminate most tariffs on US industrial goods and provide preferential market access for a wide range of US seafood and agricultural goods, in line with the commitments made in summer 2025 between the EU and the United States.
The MEPs strengthened the proposed suspension clause, which would allow the tariff preferences with the US to be suspended under a number of conditions.
For instance, the Commission would be able to propose suspending all or some trade preferences if the US were to impose additional tariffs exceeding the agreed 15-per cent ceiling, or any new duties on EU goods, a release from the Parliament said.
The suspension clause could also be activated if the US undermines the objectives of the deal, discriminated against EU economic operators, threatened member states’ territorial integrity, foreign and defence policies, or engaged in economic coercion, it noted.
The MEPs have introduced a ‘sunrise clause’ that means the new tariffs would only become effective if the US respects its commitments. These conditions include the US lowering its tariffs on EU products with a steel and aluminium content below 50 per cent, to a tariff of maximum 15 per cent.
Furthermore, for EU products with a steel and aluminium content of above 50 per cent, unless the US reduces its tariffs to a maximum of 15 per cent, EU tariff preferences for US exports of steel, aluminium and their derivative products would cease to apply six months after the entry into application of the regulation.
The members also agreed on an expiry date for the main regulation on March 31, 2028. This could only be extended via a new legislative proposal, to be submitted following a thorough impact assessment of the effects of the regulation.
The European Commission would be tasked with monitoring the impact of the new rules and would be able to suspend the new tariffs temporarily, should US imports reach a level that could cause serious harm to EU industry.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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