Fashion
Gold demand hit records as price soared: industry data
By
AFP
Published
October 30, 2025
Demand for gold hit a record high in the third quarter as the the precious metal’s price hit all-time highs on geopolitical unrest, industry data showed Thursday.
Total demand grew three percent year-on-year in the July-September period to 1,313 tonnes, the World Gold Council said, as the metal perceived as a safe haven investment benefitted from the Russia-Ukraine war and the Israel-Gaza conflict.
That was the highest level of demand by volume since the WGC began compiling such records around 25 years ago.
“Various regional conflicts, the increasing rhetoric around trade conflicts, all of that combines really to just create this atmosphere of heightened uncertainty” and boost demand for gold, WGC analyst Louise Street told AFP.
A surge in buying, driven by central banks, coincided with gold’s price striking record after record this year.
However since the metal struck an all-time peak in October of $4,381.52 an ounce, it has fallen heavily on profit taking.
Gold demand by value surged 44 percent year-on-year to a record $146 billion in the third quarter, the WGC added in its report.
The US government shutdown and expectations of more cuts to Federal Reserve interest rates, which is weighing on the dollar, have lent additional support to gold’s price in recent months according to analysts.
There has been strong demand for gold via Exchange-Traded Funds on stock markets. ETFs allow investment without trading on the gold futures market.
The high-price environment has, however, dampened jewellery demand, according to the WGC.
It dropped 23 percent to 419.2 tonnes in the July-September period, the lowest third quarter since 2020 when the Covid pandemic took hold around the world.
Street called gold’s recent retreat to around $4,000 an ounce “a healthy correction… that helps to wash out some of that more frothy, perhaps short-term speculative positioning”.
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Fashion
Finland’s Amer Sports raises 2026 guidance after strong Q1 growth
The company’s revenue increased 32 per cent year on year (YoY) to $1.945 billion in Q1 of 2026, or 26 per cent on a constant currency basis. Amer Sports said all four regions delivered healthy double-digit revenue growth, while momentum continued into the second quarter.
Amer Sports raised its 2026 revenue, margin and EPS guidance after Q1 revenue grew 32 per cent to $1.945 billion, driven by strong double-digit growth across all regions.
Technical Apparel rose 33 per cent, Outdoor Performance 42 per cent, and Ball & Racquet Sports 13 per cent.
The operating profit increased 50 per cent, while adjusted EPS rose 47 per cent to $0.38.
“Our excellent momentum continued in the first quarter of 2026, as our unique portfolio of technical sports and outdoor brands are creating white space and taking share globally,” said CEO of Amer Sports James Zheng. “All segments, geographies, and channels performed extremely well in Q1, led by exceptional Salomon Softgoods growth, a strong Arc’teryx omni-comp, and solid Wilson Tennis 360 growth.”
Segment growth led by Outdoor Performance
Technical Apparel revenue rose 33 per cent to $885 million, or 28 per cent on a constant currency basis, driven by broad-based strength across regions, categories and channels. The segment recorded omni-comp growth of 19 per cent, Amer Sports said in a press release.
Outdoor Performance revenue increased 42 per cent to $714 million, or 33 per cent on a constant currency basis, supported by strong momentum in Salomon Softgoods. Ball & Racquet Sports revenue grew 13 per cent to $347 million, or 10 per cent on a constant currency basis, led by Wilson Tennis 360.
The gross margin improved by 210 basis points (bps) to 59.9 per cent, while adjusted gross margin rose 200 bps to 60 per cent. Selling, general and administrative expenses increased 33 per cent to $856 million, while adjusted SG&A expenses rose 34 per cent to $841 million.
Operating profit increased 50 per cent to $321 million, while adjusted operating profit rose 46 per cent to $339 million. Operating margin improved by 200 bps to 16.5 per cent and adjusted operating margin rose 160 bps to 17.4 per cent.
By segment, adjusted operating margin in Technical Apparel increased 250 bps to 26.4 per cent. Outdoor Performance margin expanded 480 bps to 20.4 per cent, while Ball & Racquet Sports margin declined 370 basis points to 3.6 per cent.
Net income attributable to equity holders increased 22 per cent to $165 million, or $0.29 diluted earnings per share. Adjusted net income attributable to equity holders rose 47 per cent to $218 million, or $0.38 adjusted diluted earnings per share.
Year-on-year inventories increased 33 per cent to $1.688 billion. The company ended the quarter with net cash of $539 million and cash and cash equivalents of $684 million.
CFO of Amer Sports Andrew Page said that the company had a strong start to the year, with sales growth, margin expansion and EPS growth. “The investments we have been making behind our biggest opportunities are paying off in terms of both sales growth and margin expansion,” he added.
FY26 guidance raised on strong momentum
For full-year 2026, Amer Sports now expects reported revenue growth of 20-22 per cent, including a 200-250 bps benefit from favourable foreign exchange impact at current exchange rates. Gross margin is expected at 59-59.5 per cent, while operating margin is projected at 13.4-13.7 per cent. Fully diluted EPS is forecast at $1.18-1.23.
For the second quarter of 2026, the company expects reported revenue growth of 22-24 per cent, including a 200-250 bps foreign exchange benefit. Gross margin is expected at around 59.5 per cent, operating margin at 6-7 per cent, and fully diluted EPS at $0.08-0.1.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
ICE cotton drops sharply as overbought market triggers sell-off
The most traded July 2026 contract settled at 77.98 cents, down 3.62 cents or 4.40 per cent. The contract recorded a massive breakdown, closing below the critical 80-cent threshold for the first time since April 29. It hit an intraday low of 77.70 cents per pound, marking its lowest settlement in a month.
ICE cotton futures plunged sharply as overbought conditions triggered aggressive liquidation across contracts.
The July 2026 contract fell 4.4 per cent to settle at 77.98 cents per pound, slipping below the key 80-cent mark for the first time since April 29.
Favourable US weather, easing crop risks, a stronger dollar and weak broader markets weighed heavily on sentiment.
The December contract settled at 79.73 cents, down 3.23 cents. It also breached the key psychological level of 80 cents, erasing recent gains that had previously driven the contract to an overbought peak of 88.08 cents. Other contracts closed lower across the board, with losses ranging from 147 points to 334 points amid heavy long liquidation.
Total daily trading volume reached 90,388 contracts, marking a massive surge in market participation and a sharp breakout from recent quiet sessions. The previous session’s cleared volume stood at 52,977 contracts, representing the calm before the day’s heavy sell-off.
Market sentiment turned deeply bearish due to a combination of technical corrections from overbought conditions, a rising US Dollar Index (99.218), and a weakening Indian rupee at 96.20.
Drought-monitoring and agricultural data showed a rapid easing of crop risks, as highly favourable weather and excellent early crop emergence across key growing regions accelerated. Weather forecasts specifically indicated ideal soil moisture conditions extending from Louisiana to Georgia, supporting optimal crop development.
Market analysts said that while the fundamental bullish story may not be entirely over, the strong upward momentum has faded, triggering a sharp technical correction from recent two-year highs.
Industry experts also noted that sliding equity markets, falling CBOT grain and oilseed prices, and a stronger dollar added intense downside pressure on cotton futures.
The USDA Export Sales report for the week ending May 14 showed that US net Upland cotton export sales surged to 131,792 bales for the current marketing year. Export sales rose sharply by 176 per cent from the previous week, driven by steady demand, while net sales for the 2026–27 marketing year stood strong at 215,962 bales.
Lower domestic benchmarks followed the global plunge, with India’s Gujcot S-6 spot price shedding ₹650 to close at ₹65,400 per candy (86.71 cents/lb), causing the Indian basis premium over ICE July to widen dramatically to 873 points.
Traders also monitored Asian markets, where the China Cotton Index fell 63 yuan to 17,611 yuan per ton, while ZCE July and September cotton futures both declined by 15 yuan to close at 15,890 and 16,065 yuan per ton, respectively. Market participants remained cautious as ZCE cotton yarn bucked the trend, gaining 55 yuan to reach 22,105 yuan per ton, while ZCE Polyester Staple Fibre fell 14 yuan to 7,980 yuan per ton and viscose remained unchanged at 14,100 yuan per ton.
ICE certified cotton stocks and MCX S-6 May futures data reflected a market adjusting rapidly to international pressure.
Overall, the market tone remained highly bearish due to accelerating crop progress, favourable weather, weakness in broader markets, and aggressive technical liquidation.
This morning (Indian Standard Time), ICE July 2026 cotton traded at 78.54 cents per pound (up 0.56 cent), while cash cotton stood at 74.98 cents (down 3.62 cents). The October 2026 contract traded at 79.24 cents (down 3.34 cents), the December 2026 contract at 80.26 cents (up 0.53 cent), the March 2027 contract at 81.07 cents (up 0.49 cent), and the May 2027 contract at 81.65 cents (up 0.51 cent). A few contracts remained at their previous closing levels, with no trading recorded so far today.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
Wide legs, dark washes, Y2K cuts: Inside denim’s Trends of 2026
The need to redefine what one wears has definitely led to demand for denim, seeing a steady rise and outpacing apparel in the first three months of the year. It also has a lot to do with shoppers looking to pick up something off the shelf, which is both trendy and fits their everyday needs.
Kasia Davies, data journalist of consumer goods at Statista, in an interview with Fibre*Fashion, said that last year the barrel jeans and super wide leg trend had picked up steam, and it could continue into this year. “I do not think the wide leg is fully gone out of fashion, but I think the cigarette silhouette, which is a kind of not skinny jeans, not wide leg, but a bit more tailored … maybe coming back this year,” Davies said.
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