Fashion
UK jobs market shows tentative recovery in Jan: Survey
Permanent staff appointments continued to fall in January. However, the rate of contraction eased compared to late 2025, suggesting some stabilisation in the labour market, said the report based on a survey compiled by S&P Global from responses to around 400 UK recruitment consultancies.
Recruiters linked the softer downturn partly to reduced uncertainty following the government’s recent Budget announcement, which prompted some firms to proceed with hiring plans.
The latest KPMG and REC survey report showed UK hiring conditions stabilising in January 2026, with permanent placements falling at the slowest rate in 18 months and temporary billings returning to marginal growth.
Vacancies continued to decline, though more slowly, while candidate availability rose at a softer pace.
Stronger competition for scarce skills lifted starting salaries and temp wages.
Temporary billings increased for only the second time since May 2024, pointing to cautious reliance on flexible staffing solutions. Despite this, overall vacancies declined again, although the pace of reduction was the second-slowest recorded over the past seven months.
Candidate availability continued to rise at the start of the year, frequently attributed to redundancies and limited job openings. However, the rate of expansion was the softest in 12 months. Growth in permanent candidate numbers slowed markedly, while the increase in temporary staff availability also moderated.
Pay pressures intensified in January as competition for scarce skills drove stronger wage growth. Starting salaries for permanent staff rose at the fastest pace in nearly 18 months, while temporary wage inflation reached its joint-highest level since May 2024.
Demand for staff remained under pressure across the UK. Permanent vacancies contracted at a slightly slower pace than in December but continued to fall more sharply than temporary roles.
Regionally, permanent placements declined at a notably softer rate in the North of England and the Midlands, with the latter recording marginal growth. London and the South continued to see more pronounced reductions. Temporary billings rose sharply in the Midlands and increased in the South for the first time in two years, while the North of England recorded another steep fall. London posted a solid but softer decline.
Sectorally, permanent staff vacancies decreased across all ten monitored job categories. Nursing, medical and care roles saw the sharpest contraction, whereas engineering recorded the mildest decline. In the temporary segment, blue-collar roles were the only category to register growth, albeit marginal. Nursing, medical, care and retail experienced the steepest drops in temporary demand.
Overall, while January data point towards tentative stabilisation, recruitment activity remains constrained by fragile market confidence and ongoing cost pressures.
Commenting on the latest survey results, Lisa Fernihough, head of advisory at KPMG UK said: “After a difficult end to last year, it’s encouraging to start this year with tentative signs that hiring appetites are beginning to improve as chief execs respond to signs of easing uncertainty by starting to push forward with their plans.
“Skills shortages in specialist areas continue to impact the market, particularly where competition for talent remains intense. There are parts of the economy poised for investment, and as skills needs align with greater market stability, we could start to see more consistent improvement in hiring as the year progresses.”
Neil Carberry, REC chief executive, said: “There have been increasing signs from businesses as we enter 2026 that uncertainty on hiring plans is giving way to action. That does not mean a general hiring upswing, but the ‘wait-and-see’ period seems to be ending. Rising temp billings and a levelling off in the permanent market speak to these clearer plans. REC members across the country report a change in tone since the start of the year.
“The decisions firms are now making involve lots of trade-offs, such as whether to create jobs in the UK or elsewhere, or which jobs need the human touch as opposed to an automated solution. A growing, inclusive economy requires high levels of employment—a focus on encouraging firms to create jobs rather than discouraging that investment is more important than ever. So far, the government has struggled to convince businesses it wants them to hire. That has to change in the decisions that are made this year if we are to avoid a continued rise in unemployment.”
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
ICE cotton hits 11-month high on drought concerns, demand boost
The most traded May 2026 contract settled at 71.67 cents per pound, up 0.75 cent or 1.06 per cent. The contract marked the highest level since May 6, 2025. December 2026 contract settled at 75.75 cents with a gain of 0.77 cent. The market is showing strong momentum with third consecutive higher close and 8 gains in the last 9 sessions, indicating sustained bullish trend.
ICE cotton futures climbed to an 11-month high, supported by drought concerns in key US regions and a weaker dollar boosting export appeal.
Strong fund buying and declining certified stocks reinforced bullish sentiment.
Despite moderate export sales, demand outlook remains firm, with any price dips expected to attract active buying interest.
Total trading volume stood at 63,327 contracts, relatively lighter, suggesting controlled but firm buying interest.
A key supportive factor was the 0.2 per cent decline in the US Dollar Index, making American cotton more competitive globally and boosting export demand outlook.
Trade sentiment improved as demand conditions showed signs of recovery, even though export sales pace remained moderate but stable.
Market participants believe any price dips will attract strong buying interest, reflecting underlying strength.
Weather concerns remain critical, with drought conditions persisting in major US cotton-producing regions, especially across the southern belt, raising supply-side risks. USDA’s first Crop Progress Report for the 2026 season showed planting at 5 per cent, in line with the 5-year average and slightly ahead of last year’s 4 per cent. Early sowing has begun in Texas, Arizona, and California, indicating a normal start to the season but weather risks remain.
ICE data showed certified stocks declining to 113,241 bales, down from 114,665 bales, reflecting tightening available deliverable supplies. CFTC positioning data revealed that speculators increased net long positions by 21,606 contracts to 28,743, highlighting strong bullish participation from funds.
In related markets, crude oil prices rose 0.8 per cent, increasing polyester production costs and making cotton a more attractive alternative fibre.
US equity markets gained around 0.5 per cent, supported by optimism over possible ceasefire developments, improving overall risk sentiment. However, Chicago wheat futures declined over 1 per cent due to weak export demand, limiting broader commodity market strength. Broader market direction continues to be influenced by geopolitical tensions, inflation concerns, currency movements, and energy market volatility.
The cotton market is in a strong bullish phase, driven by improving demand outlook, weaker dollar, fund buying, and supply risks from drought and falling stocks. The trend remains firm upward, and any short-term correction is likely to be well supported by active buying interest.
This morning (Indian Standard Time), ICE cotton for May 2026 was traded at 71.67 cents per pound (unchanged), cash cotton at 69.67 cents (up 0.75 cents), the July 2026 contract at 73.94 cents (up 0.10 cent), the October 2026 contract at 75.80 cents (up 0.78 cent), the December 2026 at 75.78 cents (up 0.03 cent) and the March 2027 contract at 76.74 cents (up 0.06 cent). A few contracts remained at their previous closing levels, with no trading recorded so far today.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
India’s exports face reset as EU links trade to carbon metrics: EY
CBAM’s scope directly intersects with India’s trade profile. Steel, aluminium, cement and fertilisers make up most CBAM-covered exports and now face higher landed costs in the EU, closer scrutiny of plant-level data and formal verification at the installation level, said Saunak Saha partner, Climate Change and Sustainability Services at EY India in an article titled ‘How Indian industries are adapting to CBAM and carbon pricing’.
Global trade is entering a carbon-priced era as the EU’s CBAM links market access to verified emissions, according to EY.
For India, this raises export costs in key sectors like steel and aluminium while pushing decarbonisation efforts.
Firms are shifting strategies and markets, while India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme aims to internalise costs domestically.
The policy timeline raises the stakes. After a transitional reporting period that began in October 2023, the definitive phase from January 1, 2026, requires importers to purchase CBAM certificates aligned with European Union—Emissions Trading system linked carbon prices. The first annual declaration for 2026 imports—along with certificate surrender—is due on September 30, 2027. For Indian producers, this formalises carbon as an explicit line item in export economics, with downstream product coverage expected to broaden over time.
Importantly, CBAM is also reshaping revenue strategy—not just compliance cost. Exporters that diversify away from concentrated EU exposure toward select Africa, West Asia and Latin America markets can defend or even enhance unit realisations, particularly when paired with credible low-carbon attributes.
The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) anchors a national carbon price in the very sectors that CBAM targets, allowing carbon costs to be internalised at home rather than paid at the EU border. That keeps revenues within India’s fiscal system and enables strategic recycling toward Indian industrial decarbonisation, clean-technology deployment and household welfare protection.
Just as importantly, a credible, rules-based CCTS—underpinned by strong MRV—enhances India’s standing in climate-trade forums and supports arguments for recognising an ‘effectively paid’ domestic carbon price. In practical terms, this reframes CBAM from a unilateral liability into a managed, development-aligned transition tool.
Treat CBAM as a structural signal, not a temporary hurdle. Build verifiable emissions baselines, prioritise technology shifts that cut intensity fastest per rupee invested and craft go-to-market strategies that monetise low-carbon attributes across multiple destinations. With disciplined MRV, targeted capex and a credible domestic carbon market, Indian producers can protect market access, lift realisations and compete in a world where carbon—and proof of reduction — has become part of the price, added the article.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
India’s cotton acreage, output may go up in next year: USDA
The USDA said in its report that India’s cotton area is estimated to increase to 11.5 million hectares, up 3 per cent from the previous year, while production is forecast at 25.2 million bales (480 pound or 220 kg), marking a 7 per cent rise. In Indian terms, this translates to around 32.3 million bales of 170 kg, or nearly 5.5 million tonnes.
USDA projects India’s cotton acreage to rise 3 per cent and production 7 per cent in 2026–27, supported by better yields and a normal monsoon.
Domestic consumption is expected to grow on stronger textile exports, while imports decline and exports soften.
Higher stocks and favourable cotton-polyester dynamics signal comfortable supply, despite rising input cost pressures.
The production increase is driven by a recovery from last season’s untimely rains and a projected improvement in yield to 477 kg per hectare, up 3 per cent year on year. A normal monsoon outlook and better crop conditions are expected to further support output.
On the demand side, India’s domestic mill consumption is projected to rise to 25.8 million bales, reflecting improved prospects for textile and apparel exports. Higher demand is also likely to be supported by recent trade agreements with the EU and the UK, which are expected to boost shipments of value-added products.
India’s cotton imports are estimated at 3 million bales, lower than the previous year, as improved domestic availability reduces reliance on overseas purchases. In contrast, exports are forecast to decline to 1.2 million bales, down from the previous year, due to tighter exportable surplus and a strategic shift towards higher-margin textile exports.
Total cotton supply is expected to increase to around 39.3 million bales in next marketing year, supported by higher production and elevated beginning stocks. Ending stocks are projected to rise further to 12.3 million bales, pushing the stock-to-use ratio to about 46 per cent, indicating comfortable availability in the domestic market.
At the same time, rising crude oil prices continue to influence the cotton economy by increasing input costs such as fertilisers and agrochemicals, while also raising polyester fibre prices and improving cotton’s relative competitiveness, the report said.
Overall, the outlook for India’s cotton sector in 2026–27 points to a recovery-driven expansion, with higher acreage, improved yields, and strong domestic demand shaping market dynamics, even as export competitiveness and cost pressures remain key concerns.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
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