Fashion
US’ New Balance expands manufacturing amid record sales
New Balance reported record 2025 global sales of $9.2 billion, up 19 per cent year on year, marking its fifth straight year of double-digit growth.
North America and Europe led gains, while apparel and owned retail each crossed $1 billion.
The brand expanded manufacturing, digital and distribution capabilities, deepened athlete partnerships, and donated $17.3 million to 95 nonprofits worldwide.
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Fashion
US’ New Balance unveils International Baseball pack
The Puerto Rico-inspired cleat introduces a vibrant new Lindor v3 colorway created with powerhouse shortstop Francisco Lindor featuring a repeating Coquí frog pattern of Puerto Rico’s national animal. The Japan model debuts as an Ohtani v1 colorway honoring Shohei Ohtani and incorporating Japan’s national colors and the Flag of Japan through a navy boot with a striking metallic red New Balance “N” Lock logo.
New Balance has introduced its International Baseball Pack, a series of performance cleats celebrating the heritage of its global athletes.
The collection includes country-inspired versions of the Lindor v3, Ohtani v1, 3000 v7, 4040 v8 and Velo v4.
Designs pay tribute to Francisco Lindor, Shohei Ohtani and others, featuring national colours, symbols and cultural details.
“I wanted the design to honor the spirit of the island I love,” said Francisco Lindor, New Balance athlete. “The Coquí frog’s sound is such an iconic symbol for Puerto Ricans, and bringing that to life on the Lindor v3 makes this cleat truly meaningful to me.”
Additional cleats in the collection include designs celebrating New Balance athletes Cal Raleigh (USA), José Altuve (Venezuela), Jeremy Peña (Dominican Republic), and Ha-Seong Kim (South Korea).
“As fans of baseball first, we have deep appreciation for the distinct styles and rhythm of play that each culture brings to the game,” said Matt Nuzzo, Sr. Product Manager, American Football and Baseball Footwear at New Balance. “The International Baseball Pack celebrates and reflects the pride of our international roster. Being able to celebrate spirit of our athlete’s home countries was incredibly meaningful to us.”
Note: The headline, insights, and image of this press release may have been refined by the Fibre2Fashion staff; the rest of the content remains unchanged.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RM)
Fashion
India-Israel FTA talks begin to deepen bilateral trade ties
Total merchandise trade between the two countries stood at $3.62 billion in FY24-25. They share complementarities across several sectors, and the FTA will be a catalyst to further enhance the bilateral trade by providing certainty and predictability to businesses, including micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), the Ministry of Commerce and Industry said in a press release.
India and Israel have begun the first round of FTA negotiations in New Delhi through February 26, 2026, following the November 2025 ToR signing.
With bilateral trade at $3.62 billion in FY25, talks cover goods, services, rules, SPS, TBT and IPR.
Officials highlighted opportunities in technology and innovation, aiming for a balanced pact to boost trade, supply chains and economic cooperation.
During this round, technical experts from both sides will engage in sessions covering various aspects of FTA such as trade in goods, trade in services, rules of origin, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, technical barriers to trade, customs procedure and trade facilitation, intellectual property rights, among others.
During the opening session, Indian Commerce Secretary, Rajesh Agrawal, underscored that the FTA negotiations had begun at an opportune moment of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Israel from February 25-26, 2026.
Agrawal underscored the significant opportunities available to both sides in sectors such as innovation, science and technology, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, high-tech manufacturing, agriculture, and services. He emphasised that the FTA would enable both countries to harness and fully leverage these opportunities.
Chief Negotiator of India, Ajay Bhadoo, Additional Secretary, Department of Commerce, reiterated the significance of this engagement for the two countries and encouraged both sides to work on a balanced agreement to build a forward-looking framework for an evolving partnership.
Chief Negotiator of Israel for the FTA, Yifat Alon Perel, Senior Director Trade Policy and Agreements and Deputy Trade Commissioner, Foreign Trade Administration, Ministry of Economy and Industry, Israel, expressed that the two countries shared a close relationship, and that the FTA has the potential to strengthen supply chains, enhance cooperation and open new markets for both countries.
This engagement highlighted the strategic importance of India-Israel bilateral relationship and reinforces India’s commitment to strengthen economic partnerships in line with national priorities and global aspirations. Both sides are working towards concluding a balanced and mutually beneficial agreement, added the release.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
Bangladesh trade milieu hit by high rates, unstable law & order: DCCI
DCCI president Taskeen Ahmed told a press conference that the unchanged policy rate has forced businesses to borrow from banks at 16-17 per cent interest, creating mounting pressure.
High lending rates, unstable law and order marked by extortion, energy uncertainty, lack of coordination in revenue management and absence of policy continuity in industrial regulations are affecting the trade environment and eroding confidence in investment and business operations, trade body DCCI has said.
Rising production and distribution costs are also fuelling inflationary pressures, it noted.
“The high volume of non-performing loans (NPLs) and the reduction of the loan classification period from nine months to three months have created an undesirable situation in the financial sector, which has led to instability in the industrial sector,” he was cited as saying in a DCCI release.
“Industrial production is being hampered due to inadequate gas supply and the recent increase in gas prices for new industries and captive power plants by Tk 40 and Tk 42 per unit respectively,” he said, mentioning that both domestic demand and export targets are being missed as a result.
He also pointed to structural weaknesses in the revenue management system, saying the lack of automation leads to harassment of compliant taxpayers, while many remain outside the tax net, depriving the government of revenue and slowing collection growth.
Taskeen said delays in land acquisition, high land prices, a 41-per cent average increase in service charges by the Chattogram Port Authority and underutilisation of inland waterways have significantly raised the cost of doing business. “Rising production and distribution costs are also fuelling inflationary pressures,” he added.
As the recently-signed trade agreement with the United States does not guarantee duty-free access for the readymade garment sector, Taskeen called on the government to renegotiate the terms with the US administration.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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