Fashion
Turkish central bank lowers key policy rate by 100 bps to 39.5%
The bank also lowered the overnight lending rate from 43.5 per cent to 42.5 per cent and the overnight borrowing rate from 39 per cent to 38 per cent.
The Turkish central bank has cut its benchmark, one-week repo rate by 100 bps to 39.5 per cent, citing a rise in inflation and a slowdown in disinflation process.
It also lowered the overnight lending rate from 43.5 per cent to 42.5 per cent and the overnight borrowing rate from 39 per cent to 38 per cent.
The stance will be tightened if the inflation outlook deviates significantly from interim targets.
“The underlying trend of inflation increased in September,” the bank said in its statement after its monetary policy committee (MPC) meeting.
“While recent data suggest that demand conditions are at disinflationary levels, they also point to a slowdown in the disinflation process,” it said.
“The risks posed by recent price developments, particularly in food, to the disinflation process through inflation expectations and pricing behavior have become more pronounced,” it added.
The bank’s policy stance will be tightened in case the inflation outlook deviates significantly from interim targets.
In August this year, the bank switched to a new system by introducing interim targets, separating them from its inflation forecast ranges in a new strategy aimed at boosting transparency and confidence. It set the inflation target for this year at 24 per cent, even though it is forecasting inflation of between 25 per cent and 29 per cent.
At its previous meeting in September, the bank made a 250-point cut in the face of higher-than-expected inflation and heightened political risk. A 300-point cut was made in the meeting before that in July.
Annual inflation rose slightly to 33.29 per cent in September, breaking a long declining trend observed since the middle of 2024 and triggering predictions of a slowdown in the monetary easing cycle.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
CAI seeks scrapping of India’s 11% cotton duty to protect industry
The Cotton Association of India (CAI) said the industry is passing through one of its worst phases, with high domestic cotton prices preventing Indian mills from benefitting from free trade agreements (FTAs) with partner countries.
India’s cotton trade body has urged the government to permanently remove the 11 per cent import duty on raw cotton, warning that high MSP, low productivity and elevated domestic prices are eroding mill competitiveness and hurting exports.
CAI said duty restoration after December 2025 could worsen unemployment, bad debts and industry stress.
High MSP, low domestic productivity and elevated input costs have made Indian cotton significantly more expensive than global prices. As a result, mills are unable to compete with international suppliers, while spinners and fabric manufacturers face continuous margin pressure. The 11 per cent duty, introduced during COVID-19, has outlived its purpose and is now distorting the market, the CAI said in a press release.
CAI warned that the industry’s distress has also begun affecting cotton traders and ginners, with delayed payments and rising bad debts across the value chain. The association noted that the only sustainable solution is to ensure the availability of competitively priced raw cotton, which requires urgent duty removal.
The press release further stated that India’s textile exports are suffering due to global recessionary conditions and uncertainty in Europe. CAI said that if raw cotton imports become costlier after December 2025, unemployment, loan defaults and financial stress across mills could intensify.
The association also linked duty removal to policy goals, noting that the Textile Ministry’s target of achieving $100 billion in textile and apparel exports by 2030 will only be feasible if mills receive raw material at competitive rates. It added that India historically had zero import duty on cotton with no adverse impact on farmers.
CAI cited abnormal seasonal rains this year, which damaged cotton quality and forced mills to depend more heavily on imports. If the duty is not removed permanently, the association cautioned that buyers may shift to rival manufacturing hubs such as Vietnam, Bangladesh, Pakistan and other markets—leading to a long-term loss of India’s global market share.
CAI president Vinay N Kotak urged the government to intervene immediately, stating that permanent removal of the 11 per cent duty is critical for the survival of the entire cotton and textile value chain. The association concluded that only with competitive raw cotton can India fully utilise FTAs, attract global orders and strengthen its position in the textile supply chain.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
Australian apparel makers slash inventory to 5-year low: Report
Sales fell from $460,175 to $253,268 quarter on quarter (QoQ) as the sector navigated challenging consumer conditions, yet the aggressive destocking strategy delivered substantial margin improvement.
Lead times also improved significantly, falling to 18 days from 33 days in Q2, close to the prior-year benchmark of 17 days and slightly above the national manufacturing average of 16 days. The shift signals a return to operational normality after prolonged disruptions, Unleashed said in a press release.
Australian clothing and fashion manufacturers cut inventory by 64.7 per cent in Q3 2025 to the lowest level since 2019, while boosting margins by 8.19 per cent despite weaker sales, as per data from Unleashed.
Lead times improved and firms shifted from pandemic stockpiling to leaner, data-driven operations.
Executives said recovery signs are emerging.
The destocking move aligns with a broader manufacturing trend across Australia, where firms have shifted away from pandemic-era buffer building in favour of lean inventory strategies to protect profitability and liquidity. Nationally, small and micro manufacturers increased quarterly sales by 9 per cent to $625,400 while expanding profit margins by 3.2 per cent.
“In spite of cautious consumer spending, spiking energy prices and high labour costs, Australian small and micro manufacturers have been adapting and thriving,” said Jarrod Adam, head of production and distribution at Unleashed. “Manufacturers have found pockets of demand and capitalised on them. The real story is operational awareness; firms have focused on growing revenue and expanding profitability without tying up capital in excess stock. That’s a fundamental shift in mindset from the pandemic era of buffer building.”
The report also compared performance across the UK and New Zealand, concluding that Australian operations are leading on efficiency. Average stock on hand across industries fell to $311,200 in Q3 from $462,735 in Q2. Purchasing of raw materials also declined sharply, down 34.9 per cent to $339,371, reinforcing the shift towards disciplined, data-driven inventory control.
“The sheer velocity of the Q3 pivot is remarkable,” added Adam. “Lead times down 36 per cent, stock down 33 per cent, purchasing down 35 per cent, yet margins up nearly 4 percentage points. This is what disciplined inventory management looks like when manufacturers have real time data and the confidence to act on it.”
“It’s been a tough eighteen months, particularly for retailers, but we’re now seeing a modest recovery in market demand for the first time, which is hugely encouraging,” said Tim Deane, owner at Norsewear, a New Zealand clothing manufacturer that markets across Australia and New Zealand. “We need a sector-wide strategy to lower energy costs and better implement the use of technology to improve productivity.”
The report is based on data from over 1,000 Australian small and mid-sized manufacturers using Unleashed across categories including clothing and fashion.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
Calida Group moves to strengthen its Board of Directors
Published
December 11, 2025
The Calida Group is strengthening its Board of Directors. This move aims to broaden the Board’s expertise in retail and the textile industry and to reinforce the Group’s strategic direction. The focus is on increasing efficiency in product development and brand communications for Calida and Aubade.
With this in mind, the Board of Directors intends to propose to the shareholders of the Swiss lingerie company at the Annual General Meeting on April 15, 2026 the election of Caroline Forster and Nicole Loeb as additional members.
Caroline Forster is an experienced leader and, since 2008, has served as co-CEO of the St. Gallen-based Forster Group, which operates globally. The family-owned company, with around 850 employees, produces embroidery for haute couture, prêt-à-porter, interiors, and lingerie, as well as technical textiles. She brings many years of leadership experience in both operational and strategic roles and has held various board and industry positions since 2007. She was also a member of the Executive Committee of economiesuisse until the end of 2024.
Nicole Loeb is an experienced entrepreneur and a prominent leader in Swiss retail. Since 2005, as delegate of the Board of Directors of Loeb Holding and chair of the Board of Directors of Loeb AG, she has shaped the strategic development of the long-established, independent Swiss retail company headquartered in Bern. She holds a degree in textile business management and is also active in key industry and business organisations, including as a board member of the Swiss Retail Federation and on the regional economic advisory board of the Swiss National Bank.
“I am delighted that, with Caroline Forster and Nicole Loeb, we can propose two renowned and successful entrepreneurs and leaders for election to the Board of Directors. Thanks to their proven experience in the textile industry and retail, they will provide valuable impetus for the strategic development of the Calida Group. I am convinced that, drawing on insights from their own family businesses, they will help shape our Group’s future strategic direction in a lasting way,” said Felix Sulzberger, chairman of the Board of Directors.
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