Fashion
Munich Fabric Start brings all trade show formats to the MOC
Published
August 26, 2025
All under one roof: Munich Fabric Start is in the gearing up for its next edition from September 2 to 3. 600 international exhibitors will present their latest products for fall/winter 2026/27 at the Munich fabric fair with around 1,200 collections.
For the first time, the core trade fair will be held exclusively at the MOC together with its satellite concepts, denim trade fair Bluezone, innovation hub Keyhouse, and The Source.
The trade fair ensemble will thus consolidate its role as the central platform for the European fashion industry and continue to present itself as a comprehensive one-stop sourcing solution for designers, product managers, and fashion professionals.
This edition’s focus topics are internationality, cooperation, and sustainability. The spectrum of topics ranges from trend-setting colour and material trends for autumn/winter 2026/27 to new and returning international exhibitors from the fields of textiles, ingredients, finishing, and sourcing. It will also feature a highly informative edutainment program with leading industry experts weighing in on current market topics.
“We are looking forward to an event that combines diversity and quality like no other – with an impressive line-up of international manufacturers from all fashion segments,” says trade fair director Florian Klinder.

“Global networking, fresh ideas from cross-industry collaborations, paired with innovative technologies and creative solutions – this is our formula for success for the future. The even closer integration of our trade fair formats creates a stage where exchange, inspiration, and joint progress are not only possible but inevitable. We hope that the entire industry will feel the fresh dynamic and actively shape it,” says Klinder.
The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) is going on the Textile & Apparel Roadshow to present the diversity of African textile expertise with a joint stand under the motto “Sourcing in Africa”. Ten companies from Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Morocco, and Senegal will be represented, as well as three institutions and industry associations, including AMITH, AMDIE from Morocco, and the Chamber of Apparel and Home Textile from Egypt.
The Sigmaringen Fashion College is organising an interactive upcycling project together with Mountek, Gunold, and Reiner Knochel. From design to fabric and thread selection to production on a high-tech embroidery machine, visitors can create their own individual patch live at the event, using fabric remnants and vintage denim.

With “Nexus,” Bluezone wants to set a strong trend and focus on cooperation. Nexus is a space for connection, exchange, and inspiration. According to Munich Fabric Start, the word stands for the moment when people, ideas, technologies, and industries come together, innovation emerges, and new impulses are born.
The collaborative project Homegrown Denim Legends will also be on show, in which Bluezone puts the spotlight on influential denim makers and brands from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.
Among others, Loeb Strauss (founder of Levi’s, born in Buttenheim), Erwin O. Licher (creator of three German denim brands), and Ruedi Karrer will be in attendance with rare vintage pieces from German and GDR denim brands.
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Polyester filament prices jump in India as crude spikes
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ICE cotton drops 1% on Middle East war, stronger US dollar
May 2026 cotton settled at 64.59 cents per pound, down 1.02 cents. This marked the lowest settlement price for May contract since February 20, effectively erasing all gains made over that period.
Cotton futures on Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) fell over 1 per cent, with May 2026 settling at 64.59 cents/lb, the lowest since Feb 20, amid Middle East tensions and a stronger US dollar.
Rising inventories and risk aversion pressured prices.
Speculators cut net shorts, while crude oil surged.
ICE cotton traded mixed in early Indian hours today.
Total trading volume for the session came in at 73,225 contracts. ICE-certified deliverable No. 2 cotton inventory rose to 126,178 bales as of February 26, up from 119,457 bales the previous trading day.
The US dollar climbed to its highest level in over a month, making dollar-denominated commodities like cotton more expensive for international buyers and reducing export demand.
Market analysts stated that the Middle East conflict is putting significant pressure on cotton and that a broader risk-aversion tone is affecting the market.
On March 2, Iran continued launching attacks on US military bases across multiple countries in the Middle East, with explosions reported in several locations. An advisor to the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander announced that the Strait of Hormuz had been closed, with Iran threatening to strike any vessels attempting to pass through it.
US President Trump indicated that military action against Iran could last four to five weeks, while also expressing readiness for operations to extend considerably longer.
Major Wall Street indices declined on Monday as the conflict raised fears of disrupted global trade routes and renewed inflationary pressures. Analysts warned that investors appear to be rebuilding short positions in cotton, suggesting continued downward price pressure in the near term. The earlier May contract low of 62.86 cents per pound as a key support level that could be tested again.
CFTC data released the prior Friday showed that speculators reduced their net short positions in ICE cotton futures and options by 26,508 contracts in the week ending February 24, bringing net shorts to 48,922 contracts.
International crude oil and natural gas prices surged sharply on Monday following US and Israeli strikes on Iran, with retaliatory actions forcing the closure of several energy facilities in the region.
This morning (Indian Standard Time), ICE cotton for May 2026 was traded at 64.75 cents per pound (up 0.16 cent), cash cotton at 62.59 cents (down 1.02 cent), the March 2026 contract at 62.59 cents ((down 1.02 cent)), the July 2026 contract at 66.75 cents (up 0.14 cent), the October 2026 contract at 68.18 cents (down 0.49 cent) and the December 2026 at 69.04 cents (up 0.12 cent). A few contracts remained at their previous closing levels, with no trading recorded so far today.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
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US ETR dips to 9.4% as blanket 10% tariff replaces IEEPA levies: Fitch
If the US administration imposes a 15-per cent levy, the US ETR would rise to 11.3 per cent.
President Donald Trump reinstated tariffs immediately following the US Supreme Court’s February 20 ruling that invalidated the reciprocal tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The new blanket 10-per cent tariff rate is authorised under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 and expires in 150 days unless extended by Congress.
The 10-per cent blanket reciprocal tariff imposed by the US on most trading partners has reduced the US effective tariff rate (ETR) to 9.4 per cent from 12.7 per cent, Fitch Ratings said.
If a 15-per cent levy is imposed, the ETR would rise to 11.3 per cent.
China has the highest ETR among trading partners, followed by Vietnam, Japan and Brazil.
China’s ETR is around 19 per cent from 29 per cent earlier.
Section 122 permits a maximum rate of 15 per cent but does not allow for tariff adjustments for individual countries.
Prior to the court decision, China was subject to two reciprocal tariffs: a fentanyl tariff of 10 per cent that applied to all imports and a 10-per cent reciprocal tariff on an import base subject to carveouts. The two tariffs have been consolidated into the 10-per cent blanket tariff, reducing China’s ETR to around 19 per cent from 29 per cent, Fitch said in a release.
China still has the highest ETR among major trading partners, followed by Vietnam, Japan and Brazil. Of the United States’ 31 largest trading partners, 26 will see their ETRs decline. Brazil benefits the most, with its ETR decreasing by 18 percentage points (pp) to 11 per cent from 29 per cent.
ETRs for most countries largely remain unchanged following the switch in tariff regimes, and no country will see an increase in its ETR if the Section 122 tariff rate remains at 10 per cent.
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