Fashion
India unlikely to extend duty-free cotton imports beyond December 2025
Speculation has emerged within trade circles that the government may consider granting additional time for duty-free cotton imports. However, there is currently no formal proposal under consideration, and policymakers appear reluctant to prolong the relief.
Indian government is unlikely to extend duty-free cotton imports beyond December 31, 2025, despite textile industry demands to remove the nearly 11 per cent duty.
Policymakers remain cautious as domestic cotton availability is adequate and CCI procurement may rise sharply.
Extending the window could depress prices, raise MSP-linked fiscal costs, hurt farmer incomes and trigger political resistance.
The government approved duty-free cotton imports in September 2025 following the imposition of 50 per cent tariffs by the US, which disrupted trade flows and added pressure amid strained bilateral relations and protracted trade negotiations.
Sanjay K Jain, managing director of TT Limited and chairman of the ICC National Textiles Committee, told Fibre2Fashion, “The industry has been consistently demanding the removal of import duty so it can access raw material at globally competitive prices. However, I do not personally expect the government to extend duty-free cotton imports when the Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) is actively procuring cotton, and its purchases may reach 100 lakh bales of 170 kg. There will be no scarcity of domestic cotton in the coming months of the current season.”
An extension of duty-free imports would significantly depress domestic cotton prices, triggering higher procurement by the CCI at the minimum support price (MSP). This, in turn, would substantially increase the government’s financial burden.
Jain noted that greater reliance on imports could weaken price realisation for farmers, making the move politically sensitive. With cotton farmers already facing volatility, any policy perceived as favouring imports over domestic procurement is likely to face resistance.
Industry stakeholders argue that removing import duty is necessary to ensure raw material availability and price stability for spinners, particularly amid global supply disruptions. However, the government’s priority appears to remain farmer protection and limiting fiscal exposure through higher MSP procurement.
With farmer unrest remaining a key concern for the Modi government, analysts believe extending duty-free cotton imports could invite political backlash, making a policy extension beyond December increasingly unlikely.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
UK commits $1.25 mn to trade facilitation programme for 2026–29
The programme is jointly implemented by UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the World Customs Organization and UK Customs.
The UK has committed around $1.25 million in funding for the ‘Accelerate Trade Facilitation’ programme for the 2026-2029 period.
The programme is jointly implemented by UNCTAD, the World Customs Organization and UK Customs.
The latest phase will expand the programme’s capacity-building activities and introduce the Reform Tracker tool to up to three additional countries.
For more than a decade, the programme has supported over 30 economies to speed up the movement of goods and strengthen cooperation between the public and private sectors.
“We will build on the strong and sustained impact achieved by partner countries over the last 11 years of the programme, strengthening national trade facilitation committees and driving practical, lasting reforms that make trade simpler, faster and more inclusive while supporting economic growth,” said Megan Shaw, deputy director of international customs and border engagement at UK Customs in an UNCTAD release.
The programme will continue to place national trade facilitation committees (NTFCs) at the core of its work. NTFCs serve as coordination platforms where government agencies and businesses identify bottlenecks, agree on priorities and advance trade facilitation reforms.
UNCTAD has supported them through specialised training, including via its trade facilitation e-learning platform, and practical tools such as the Reform Tracker. The tool helps countries monitor progress on trade facilitation reforms and keep society-wide collaborators aligned.
“These reforms contribute to a trading environment that is faster, cheaper, more transparent and more predictable—conditions that help businesses compete and grow,” said Angel Gonzalez Sanz, officer-in-charge of UNCTAD’s division on technology and logistics.
The 2026-2029 phase will expand the programme’s capacity-building activities and introduce the Reform Tracker to up to three additional countries.
These efforts will help deepen digitalisation and improve coordination between border agencies—measures crucial to reducing costs and processing times for traders.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Sweden’s H&M’s Q1 FY26 sales dip but margins improve on cost control
The gross profit reached SEK 25,138 million (~$2.39 billion), with the gross margin improving to 50.7 per cent from 49.1 per cent a year earlier, supported by lower markdown costs and more efficient sourcing.
H&M has reported net sales of SEK 49,607 million (~$4.72 billion) in Q1 FY26, with sales down 1 per cent in local currencies.
Improved cost control lifted gross margin to 50.7 per cent and operating profit rose 26 per cent.
The net profit increased to SEK 704 million (~$75.05 million), while inventory fell 16 per cent.
Currency effects weighed on revenue despite stronger margins and improving sales.
The operating profit rose by 26 per cent to SEK 1,512 million, lifting the operating margin to 3 per cent from 2.2 per cent. Selling and administrative expenses declined by 1 per cent in local currencies and by 9 per cent in SEK terms, reflecting continued cost discipline, H&M said in a press release.
The net profit after tax (PAT) increased to SEK 704 million (~$75.05 million), with earnings per share (EPS) improving to SEK 0.45 from SEK 0.37. Inventory management also showed progress, with stock-in-trade falling 16 per cent to SEK 34,608 million, indicating improved inventory productivity.
However, sales in SEK terms were impacted by a currency translation effect of just over 9 percentage points due to the strengthened Swedish krona. The quarter began with weaker demand following strong Black Friday trading, though sales trends improved towards the end, supported by spring collections.
“Good cost control and improved gross margin contributed to strengthened profitability in a quarter marked by cautious consumption and large currency translation effects,” said Daniel Erver, CEO at H&M.
Looking ahead, H&M expects March 2026 sales to rise by 1 per cent in local currencies. The company also highlighted its sustainability progress, noting that 32 per cent of materials used in 2025 were recycled, while 91 per cent were either recycled or sustainably sourced.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
EU-funded RegioGreenTex pushes 25 SME pilots to commercialisation
RegioGreenTex was one of the first projects funded under the Interregional Innovation Investments (I3) Instrument programme that focused on process, service and business model innovation, developing advanced textile recycling technologies, regional recycling hubs, and a digital ecosystem for matchmaking and capacity building.
Five regional hubs mapped SME needs and developed services and value chains as well as tools that keep helping SMEs, an official release said.
The RegioGreenTex Digital Tool keeps matchmaking, sharing trainings and hosting the participants’ knowledge base.
The Waste Wizard shows how artificial intelligence-enhanced matchmaking can link leftover textiles with the right reuse or recycling routes.
From recycled-content yarn processes (Tintex) to Recycrom low-impact dyeing (Officina39), ultrasonic quilting for full recyclability (Rovitex) and hybrid recycled-fibre yarns (Hilaturas Mar), the pilots showed concrete, repeatable ways to cut impact without losing performance.
The hubs are now open for collaboration, the digital tools are live and the pilot portfolio is primed for investors and adopters.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
-
Politics1 week agoAfghanistan announces release of detained US citizen
-
Sports1 week agoBroadcast industry CEO says consolidation is ‘essential’ to compete for NFL soaring media rights prices
-
Business1 week agoProperty Play: Home flippers see smallest profits since the Great Recession, real estate data firm says
-
Entertainment1 week agoUN warns migratory freshwater fish numbers are spiralling
-
Tech1 week agoCan a Home Appliance Fix the Problem of Soft-Plastic Waste?
-
Business1 week agoGold prices soar in Pakistan – SUCH TV
-
Fashion1 week agoICE cotton slips on weaker crude, profit booking
-
Business1 week agoMore women are entering wealth management, but few are in advisory roles, study finds
