Fashion
China releases details of outcomes of talks with US in Malaysia
Both sides agreed to continue extending certain tariff exclusion measures, a ministry spokesperson said.
Outcomes of the recent China-US talks in Kuala Lumpur include US cancellation of the 10-per cent ‘fentanyl tariffs’ and suspension, for another year, the 24-per cent reciprocal tariffs on goods from China, Hong Kong and Macau.
China will make similar adjustments to its countermeasures.
Both sides will continue extending certain tariff exclusion measures.
China will resolve TikTok issues with the US.
The United States will suspend for one year the implementation of a new rule announced on September 29 that expands its ‘entity-list’ export restrictions to any entity that is at least 50 per cent owned by one or more entities on the list.
China will suspend the implementation of relevant export control measures announced on October 9 for a year and will study and refine specific plans, the spokesperson was cited as saying by a state-controlled news agency.
The US side will suspend the implementation of measures under its Section 301 investigation targeting China’s maritime, logistics and shipbuilding industries for a year. China will follow by suspending the implementation of its countermeasures for a year.
In addition, the two sides also reached consensus on issues including anti-drug cooperation on fentanyl, expanding agricultural product trade and the handling of individual cases involving relevant enterprises, the spokesperson said.
China will properly resolve issues related to TikTok with the US side.
Chinese President Xi Jinping said in Busan, South Korea, yesterday that he is ready to continue working with President Donald Trump to build a solid foundation for bilateral ties, and create a sound atmosphere for the development of both countries.
“China and the United States should be partners and friends. That is what history has taught us and what reality needs,” he said.
It is normal for the two leading economies of the world to have frictions now and then, Xi noted.
He called on teams from both sides to work out and finalise the follow-up steps as soon as possible, and ensure that the common understandings are effectively upheld and implemented, to inject confidence into the two countries as well as the global economy through solid deliverables.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Renewable energy uptake grows, but textile decarbonisation lags
Despite rising renewable installations, global textile decarbonisation remains slow and uneven.
Coal-heavy thermal processes, especially in large tier-2 facilities, continue to dominate emissions, while renewables still form a small share of total energy use.
Progress hinges on accelerating coal exit, electrification, and targeted action in high-impact facilities.
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Fashion
India’s Arvind Fashions posts strong Q3 FY26 as revenue jumps 14.5%
Arvind Fashions Limited has reported strong Q3 FY26 performance, with revenue rising 14.5 per cent YoY to ₹1,377 crore (~$149.6 million), driven by robust direct-to-consumer growth.
EBITDA increased 18 per cent, with margin expansion to 14.2 per cent.
Retail like-to-like grew 8.2 per cent, online B2C nearly 50 per cent, while nine-month revenues reached ₹3,901 crore (~$424 million).
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Fashion
India Budget signals manufacturing depth & cluster-led textile growth
From a global sourcing and export perspective, Sanjay Jain, Group CEO of PDS Ltd, welcomed the integrated vision outlined in the Budget. “As a sector that provides direct employment to over 45 million people and supports nearly 100 million livelihoods indirectly, these measures are both timely and impactful,” he said. Jain highlighted the thrust on public capital expenditure, champion MSMEs, Samarth 2.0 and Tex-Eco, adding that PM MITRA parks and cluster modernisation will help reduce import dependence and strengthen MMF apparel and technical textiles. “This Budget reinforces confidence in India’s journey towards becoming a globally integrated, high-quality manufacturing hub,” he said.
Highlighting supply-chain realignments, Priyavrata Mafatlal, vice-chairman of Arvind Mafatlal Group and MD of Mafatlal Industries, said the Budget improves planning visibility for manufacturers. “The thrust on fibre supply, scale and value addition will help stabilise input costs, improve margins and enable positive investment decisions,” he said. Mafatlal also welcomed the focus on skilling aligned with automation, digitalisation and AI, calling it essential to bridge the industry’s employability gap.
India’s textile and apparel industry views the Budget 2026–27 as a strategic signal focused on manufacturing depth, MSME-led growth and long-term competitiveness rather than headline announcements.
Industry leaders highlighted cluster revival, MSME financing, skilling and sustainability as key positives, while flagging unresolved concerns around power costs and fibre competitiveness.
Gautam Ganeriwal, executive director of Sitaram Spinners Pvt Ltd, said the Budget reflects learning from ground realities. “Every Budget needs to be read not for announcements, but for intent. From a textile industry lens, today’s Budget carries a clear signal: India wants manufacturing depth, not just manufacturing headlines,” he said. Ganeriwal highlighted the Integrated Programme for Textiles, revival of 200 legacy clusters, strengthened MSME finance through TReDS, and professional support via Corporate Mitras as meaningful interventions. However, he noted that cost competitiveness remains unresolved, citing power tariffs, cross-subsidies and fibre cost distortions, while calling for the removal of import duty on cotton and MMF raw materials.
From a policy and advisory lens, Kanishk Maheshwari, co-founder and MD of Primus Partners, said textiles have emerged as a spotlight sector. “The focus on modernised infrastructure and skill upgradation will provide a significant boost to foreign investments and link indigenous textile units to global value chains,” he said.
MSME-focused reforms were another major theme. Rohit Mahajan, founder and managing partner of Plutos ONE, said the ₹10,000 crore MSME Growth Fund marks a decisive shift from subsidies to scale-led competitiveness. “The integration of GeM with TReDS and the move to make receivables tradable as asset-backed securities directly address working capital challenges and lower the cost of capital for MSMEs,” he said, adding that such reforms will support tariff-resilient, export-ready enterprises.
Echoing long-term optimism, Nitin Jain, founder of Ivyn, said the revival of 2,000 clusters, creation of the MSME growth fund and establishment of mega textile parks signal sustained commitment. “These measures will modernise the textile and garment ecosystem, enabling scale, innovation and global competitiveness,” he said.
Industry stakeholders said that while the Budget sets a strong structural direction for textiles, garments and MSMEs, effective implementation, power-sector reforms and fibre cost competitiveness will be critical to translating intent into sustained growth.
New-age D2C fashion brands have welcomed the Budget, saying its export-oriented measures, cluster modernisation and sustainability focus create a stronger foundation for Indian brands looking to scale globally while building value-added manufacturing at home. Siddharth Dungarwal, founder of Snitch, said the Budget takes a decisive step towards positioning India as a global textile and apparel powerhouse. “The focus on export enablement, duty rationalisation for leather and synthetic goods, and the removal of the courier export value cap will significantly benefit brands and manufacturers looking to scale internationally,” he said.
Dungarwal added that the integrated policy approach covering fibres, skilling, cluster modernisation, sustainability and technical textiles reflects a long-term vision for the sector. “For new-age D2C brands and exporters, this Budget creates the right foundation to compete globally while building value-added manufacturing capabilities in India,” he said.
From the perspective of women-led D2C businesses, Tejasvi Madan, founder of Beyond Bound, said the Budget could go further in addressing the specific needs of emerging fashion exporters. She called for a dedicated export-readiness programme for D2C fashion brands, faster GST refunds and duty drawback timelines, and simplified cross-border payment and forex compliance.
Madan also highlighted the need for special credit lines and incubation support for women-founded apparel start-ups, along with plug-and-play shared manufacturing facilities and capital subsidies for flexible, small-batch production. “Incentives for sustainable and circular fashion, R&D support for next-generation fabrics, modern skilling for athleisure and technical apparel, and a ‘Made in India Activewear’ global branding mission would significantly accelerate responsible growth,” she said.
Industry observers said the Budget’s export facilitation measures and manufacturing-led focus provide momentum for India’s fast-growing D2C fashion ecosystem, while targeted policy refinements could further help home-grown brands compete in global markets.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
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