Fashion
Australian apparel imports down but textiles up in July-Dec 2025
Australia’s textile‑apparel trade in H1 FY26 looks uneven: apparel imports dipped slightly, while upstream textile imports rose.
Fibre inflows also climbed modestly.
Rising yarn and fabric imports suggest inventory rebuilding and manufacturing needs.
Fibre exports remain resilient short term despite price-led declines last year.
Wool competitiveness stays sensitive to global prices and logistics.
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Fashion
France’s LVMH to propose Ariane Gorin for board seat at April AGM
“I warmly thank Marie-Laure Sauty de Chalon for her valuable contributions to the Group over the past twelve years. Her recognized expertise in digital and on topics of governance and sustainability, her strategic vision, and her deep knowledge of the Group have been assets, enriching the discussions within the Board as well as the various Committees in which she participated.
LVMH will propose Ariane Gorin’s appointment to its board at the April 23, 2026 AGM after Marie-Laure Sauty de Chalon decided not to renew her mandate following twelve years.
Chairman and CEO Bernard Arnault praised Sauty de Chalon’s contributions and highlighted Gorin’s international experience and expertise in technology and travel as key strengths for the Group.
“I am delighted that Ariane Gorin has agreed to join our Board. Ariane Gorin is an experienced and visionary leader, whose ability to tackle complex challenges is widely recognized. Her remarkable international career, enriched by her dual French-American nationality, as well as her sharp expertise in the technology and travel sectors, will be of undeniable value in the coming years,” said Bernard Arnault, Chairman and CEO of the LVMH Group.
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
Is India the next big luxury fashion market?
Fashion
Textile & apparel exporters see margin relief from India–US trade deal
Industry players said the immediate tariff reset to around 18 per cent comes as a major relief after months of cost pressure, particularly in the US market, which remains India’s largest export destination for apparel.
Indian textile and apparel exporters have welcomed the India–US trade deal, saying the cut in US tariffs to around 18 per cent gives India a 2 per cent edge over competing sourcing nations.
Industry leaders expect immediate margin relief in Q4 2025–26, stronger US orders from the next financial year, and a broader export growth cycle as buyers reassess global sourcing strategies.
Reacting to the development, Pallab Banerjee, managing director of Pearl Global Industries Ltd, said the announcement has lifted significant uncertainty. “This is the news our industry was holding its breath for. Most exporters were forced to offer discounts to US customers to compensate for the penalty tariff. That pressure is now gone, and India has gained a 2 per cent tariff advantage compared to competing countries,” he said.
Banerjee added that the relief will be felt immediately. “The last two months of Q4 should see easing of bottom-line pressure. From Q2 of the next financial year onwards, we should also see an improvement in the top line from the US market. The brakes that were on for the last six months are now being released,” he said, linking the trade deal with the government’s broader push on infrastructure, capex, skilling and ease of doing business.
Providing a broader sourcing perspective, Kishan Daga, founder anchor of consulting firm Concepts N Strategies, said the tariff reset has redrawn the global apparel sourcing map. “The US has reduced tariffs on Indian apparel to around 18 per cent, making India more competitive than Bangladesh and Vietnam and far ahead of China, which continues to face much higher effective tariffs,” he said. Daga noted that historically, tariff advantages played a decisive role in the rise of competing sourcing hubs, and India is now well placed to reclaim lost ground. “For US buyers in activewear, athleisure and performance apparel, India has once again become a serious alternative,” he added.
Exporters also see the deal as a precursor to a broader growth cycle, especially with other FTAs on the horizon. N Thirukkumaran, chairman of Esstee Exports India Pvt Ltd, said that the sentiment across the apparel export community has turned sharply positive. “With India now among the most competitive in Asia on tariffs, the sector is expected to grow in leaps and bounds. Once the EU and UK deals come into effect, we expect apparel exports to double over the next three years,” he said, adding that large-scale capacity expansion and employment generation are likely to follow.
From the upstream, Sammir Dattani, executive director of Sanathan Textiles Ltd, said the trade deal, combined with the Union Budget’s focus on integrated value-chain development, sends a strong signal to manufacturers. “The emphasis on fibre self-reliance, modernisation of clusters, and support for man-made and technical textiles creates a solid foundation for scale and global competitiveness,” he said. Dattani added that the policy direction supports a shift towards higher-value yarns, sustainable processes and technology-driven manufacturing, helping the industry manage volatility and strengthen margins.
Industry leaders said India’s growing network of trade agreements with major markets, including the US, EU and UK, positions the country favourably at a time when global buyers are re-evaluating sourcing strategies, potentially ushering in a new growth phase for India’s textile and apparel exports.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
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