Fashion
US Upland cotton sales up 36%, Pima down this week: USDA
According to the US Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) weekly export sales report, sales were mainly to Vietnam (109,700 RB, including 4,300 RB switched from Nicaragua, 1,300 RB switched from Thailand, and a decrease of 100 RB), India (53,800 RB), China (35,200 RB), Bangladesh (31,900 RB), and Mexico (6,900 RB), partly offset by reductions for Nicaragua (4,300 RB).
US net sales of Upland cotton rose 36 per cent week-on-week to 245,000 running bales (RB) for 2025–26 during the week ending August 28, 2025, led by Vietnam, India, China, Bangladesh and Mexico, according to USDA.
Export shipments totalled 154,700 RB, mainly to Vietnam.
Pima cotton sales fell to 1,600 RB from 3,900 RB, while shipments reached 4,400 RB, with India the top destination.
Export shipments of Upland cotton totalled 154,700 RB, primarily destined for Vietnam (82,800 RB), Pakistan (17,500 RB), Mexico (11,000 RB), Honduras (6,600 RB), and India (6,300 RB).
Net sales of Pima cotton amounted to 1,600 RB for 2025–26, down from 3,900 RB the previous week. The main buyers were India (1,100 RB), Peru (400 RB), and Indonesia (100 RB), partly offset by reductions for Switzerland (200 RB).
Export shipments of Pima totalled 4,400 RB, mainly to India (2,500 RB), Egypt (700 RB), Peru (500 RB), Indonesia (300 RB), and Slovenia (100 RB).
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
Trump announces termination of all trade talks with Canada
Earlier this year, Trump imposed tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminium and autos. Ottawa responded in kind. Bilateral talks on a potential deal for the steel and aluminum sectors had been going on since then.
US President Donald Trump yesterday announced termination of all trade talks with Canada following what he termed a fraudulent advertisement by the latter’s state of Ontario in which former and late President Ronald Reagan was shown making negative remarks about tariffs.
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation said the ad was “using selective audio and video” of Reagan.
“The Ronald Reagan Foundation has just announced that Canada has fraudulently used an advertisement, which is FAKE, featuring Ronald Reagan speaking negatively about Tariffs. The ad was for $75,000,000. They only did this to interfere with the decision of the US Supreme Court, and other courts,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“Based on their egregious behavior, ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED,” he added.
Premier of Canada’s Ontario state Doug Ford said earlier this week the advertisement from his province with anti-tariff messaging had caught Trump’s attention. The ad showed Reagan, a Republican, criticising tariffs on foreign goods while saying they caused job losses and trade wars.
In a statement yesterday, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation said the advertisement by the government of Ontario was “using selective audio and video” of Reagan and that the foundation was reviewing its legal options.
“The ad misrepresents the Presidential Radio Address (by Reagan in 1987), and the Government of Ontario did not seek nor receive permission to use and edit the remarks,” the foundation said.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Turkish central bank lowers key policy rate by 100 bps to 39.5%
The bank also lowered the overnight lending rate from 43.5 per cent to 42.5 per cent and the overnight borrowing rate from 39 per cent to 38 per cent.
The Turkish central bank has cut its benchmark, one-week repo rate by 100 bps to 39.5 per cent, citing a rise in inflation and a slowdown in disinflation process.
It also lowered the overnight lending rate from 43.5 per cent to 42.5 per cent and the overnight borrowing rate from 39 per cent to 38 per cent.
The stance will be tightened if the inflation outlook deviates significantly from interim targets.
“The underlying trend of inflation increased in September,” the bank said in its statement after its monetary policy committee (MPC) meeting.
“While recent data suggest that demand conditions are at disinflationary levels, they also point to a slowdown in the disinflation process,” it said.
“The risks posed by recent price developments, particularly in food, to the disinflation process through inflation expectations and pricing behavior have become more pronounced,” it added.
The bank’s policy stance will be tightened in case the inflation outlook deviates significantly from interim targets.
In August this year, the bank switched to a new system by introducing interim targets, separating them from its inflation forecast ranges in a new strategy aimed at boosting transparency and confidence. It set the inflation target for this year at 24 per cent, even though it is forecasting inflation of between 25 per cent and 29 per cent.
At its previous meeting in September, the bank made a 250-point cut in the face of higher-than-expected inflation and heightened political risk. A 300-point cut was made in the meeting before that in July.
Annual inflation rose slightly to 33.29 per cent in September, breaking a long declining trend observed since the middle of 2024 and triggering predictions of a slowdown in the monetary easing cycle.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
India’s exports to US drop, to non-US markets expand in Sep: Crisil
The decline followed the Trump administration’s decision to impose a 50-per cent tariff on Indian goods, effective from August 27. Without the frontloading of shipments ahead of the US tariff hike, the fall would have been sharper, it noted.
India’s merchandise exports to the US contracted by 11.9 per cent YoY in September, after recording a 7-per cent YoY growth in August, while exports to non-US markets expanded by 10.9 per cent YoY in the month, accelerating from a 6.6-per cent YoY growth in August, Crisil recently said.
RMG exports contracted—from a YoY drop of 2.6 per cent in August to a decrease of 10.1 per cent YoY in September.
The country’s overall merchandise exports rose by 6.7 per cent YoY to reach $36.4 billion in September, demonstrating resilience despite global economic headwinds and the additional US tariffs. Exports rose for the third straight month, following a similar pace in August.
Exports of organic and inorganic chemicals weakened—from a YoY growth of 3.8 per cent YoY in August to to a YoY growth of 1.8 per cent in September.
Exports of readymade garments contracted—from a YoY drop of 2.6 per cent in August to a decrease of 10.1 per cent YoY in September. Within this category, exports of cotton yarn contracted by 11.7 per cent YoY in the month compared to a contraction of 2.3 per cent in August, and those of man-made yarn contracted by 2.3 per cent YoY compared to a 3.1-per cent drop in August.
The country’s merchandise exports are facing headwinds from US tariff hikes and a broader slowdown in global growth, Crisil cautioned in a note.
Crisil expects India’s current account deficit (CAD) to remain within manageable limits, backed by strong services exports, steady remittance inflows and easing crude oil prices. The CAD will be around 1 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in this fiscal, up from 0.6 per cent in the previous, it projected.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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