| 2004年11月11日 |
导读:
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| 1、Buy:
Clothing |
| 2、Buy:
Polyester Staple Fibre |
| 3、Buy:
WOOL DRESSES FOR MEN |
| 4、Buy:
Suits |
| 5、Buy:
Embroidered suit etc. |
| 6、Buy:
Embroidered products |
| 7、Buy:
Knitted Sheet |
| 8、Buy:
Linen |
| 9、Buy:
Sanitary napkin material |
| 10、Buy:
Slippers |
| 11、US-Federated:
Big home impact in fall '05 |
| 12、Post-quota, textile firms may turn to China in bargain hunt |
| 13、Textile exports will double in two years |
| 14、South
Africa's Textile Industry "Hanging On By a Thread" |
| 15、The new prices of the Egyptian cotton |
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| Buy:
Clothing |
Looking for Mens,women, children
clothing,Could you please send out any Catalogues. Pricing, Sizing
Brochures, Samples (Optional) and other information. That you may have
on your products.
Company: PRIORITY PLUS
Contact: . Philip Perry
Phone: 61-89-3044941
Fax: 61-89-3044941
Address: 15 Ballina Close Merriwa
Country: Australia |
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| Buy:
Polyester Staple Fibre |
Polyester Staple fibre 1.5 Denier, quantity approximately 10 Tonns.
Company Mechanical Packing Industries Pvt Ltd.
Contact Mr. Thakkar
E-Mail spitmaan@vsnl.net
Phone 91-22-28236610 ~ 14
Fax 91-22-28382496
Country India
Address 15, Parsi Panchayat Road, Andheri (East), Mumbai-400069
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| Buy:
WOOL DRESSES FOR MEN |
We are looking for exporters and manufacturers
companies of WOOL DRESSES FOR MEN.
Company CONFECCIONES COLOMBIA S.A.
Contact MS. PAOLA TORRES
E-Mail jcompras@everfit.com.co
Phone 57-4-4456008
Fax 57-4-4410563
Country Colombia
Address CALLE 71, 65-74, MEDELLIN, ANTIOQUI |
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| Buy:
Suits |
Looking for 300 custom tailored tuxedoes and
100 designer and business suits.
Company: 206 Clothing
Contact: Mr. Tony Watson (Manager)
Phone : 1-202-4238528
Fax: 1-202-4238528
Address : 101, East San Fernando # 538, San Jose, Ca, United States Of
America-95112 |
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| Buy:
Embroidered suit etc. |
Looking for high quality salwar suit, sarees, ghagra, embroidered suit
etc.
Company: Sports R Us Industries
Contact: Mr. Humayun Arshad (Director)
Phone : 92-432-558785
Fax : 92-432-551953
Address : 424, Mir Hassan Road,, Model Town, Sialkot, Punjab, Pakistan
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| Buy:
Embroidered products |
Looking for hand embroidered cushions, stoles,
shawls etc.
Company: Treasure Company Limited
Contact: Mr. Tony Luis (Proprietor)
Phone : 61-39-6823477
Fax : 61-39-6823884
Address: 39, Richmond Street,Melbourne,Voctiria,Australia-110 611 |
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| Buy:
Knitted Sheet |
Looking for twin, full, queen and king 100% cotton 135 gsm jersey knitted
sheet in bulk.
Company: Home Trendz
Contact: Mr. Ketan Jain (Ceo)
Phone : 91-22-39600105
Fax : 91-22-24322874
Address: F-19 Dadar Manish Market,, S.B.Marg, Dadar(West), Mumbai,
Maharastra, India-400 028
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| Buy:
Linen |
We are looking for Linen as following:
(1)72" x 96" thermal/waffle weave blanket
Colour champagne
Wt * kg, 345 gm/m2
Qty 2,180 pcs
(2) Floor mat - 20" x 30"/ 100% cotton 10lbs/doz
Qty 260 pcs
(3) Mattress pads (single) - 36" x 75", 1 side quilted
Elastic band at 4 corners
Qty 692 pcs
Company: SembCorp Logistics Ltd.
Contact: Edmond Chee
Country: Singapore
Phone: 65-64-628302
Fax: 65-64-628884
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| Buy:
Sanitary napkin material |
We are building a factory producing sanitaty napkin in Vietnam. We are
looking for material sources to prepare for operation. They could be:
fluff pulp, non-woven cloth, prime airlaid, adhesive tape, frontal tape,
etc. Please contact us soon with catalogue and price list.
Company: Anphu Investment - Produce Co., Ltd.
Contact: Jimmy Nguyen
Country: Vietnam
Address: 1130T De La Thanh Rd., Hanoi, Vietnam
Phone: 8447664352
Fax: 8448348431
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| Buy:
Slippers |
Interested in purchasing slippers to distribute through my company, I am
requesting prices and a catalog of your products available.
Company: BNJ Investments Ltd.
Contact: Justin Cuke
Country: Barbados
Address: Sunnyside, Hastings, Christ Church, Barbados
Phone: 246 4273603
Fax: -
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| US-Federated:
Big home impact in fall '05 |
Federated Department Stores' home department will experience
"dramatic change" come next fall under the influence the
centralized Macy's Home operation, Chief Financial Officer Karen Hoguet
told analysts during the retailer's third-quarter conference call
earlier today.
Acknowledging there are likely to be some bumps in the road along the
way, Hoguet added, "We will continue to see some change in the
fourth quarter and some in spring 2005, but not until fall 2005 will
there be dramatic change."
Also by fall, Federated expects to be enjoying the fruits of its
across-the-store "reinvent" remodeling program, which should
by then be generating two-thirds of the company's sales, she said.
For the holiday selling season, Federated is making efforts to reduce
clutter, omit center aisle tables and clear up some signage, Hoguet
said, to create a better shopping experience for customers.
In third quarter news, the company said inventories were down 3.3
percent.
"And we are in very good shape for the fourth quarter," Hoguet
added. "We have positioned ourselves better." However,
Federated expects a modest fourth quarter, with comps rising from 1.5
percent to 3 percent.
The department store company boosted its third quarter net income by
more than 10 percent, to $74 million. Terry Lundgren, Federated's
chairman, president and CEO, said the performance exceeded the company's
expectations.
Sales were just slightly better than break-even for the third quarter,
and operating income increased by a modest 1.2 percent. Same-store sales
edged up 0.4 percent for the quarter. The bottom line benefited from a
reduction in interest expense for the quarter of nearly 10 percent. The
company was also able to keep its selling, general and administrative
expenses relatively in check; this item fell 20 basis points during the
period.
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| Post-quota, textile firms may turn to China in bargain hunt |
The lifting of textile quotas from January ’05 is not just about multinational companies or major retail chains setting up offices in India to source cheaper.
It’s also about the opportunity available to the $30bn Indian garment industry to source from markets like China. There is also the threat posed by cheaper imports from China, particularly for the garment industry.
It will also impact Indian units, which will have to scale up, expand or wind up as jobbers for larger units. “We are looking at sourcing linen from China because processing is their strength. They could be taking raw material from here, processing it and selling at costs lower than in India. Of course, we will have to weigh this against transportation and other costs,” Abdul Rab, general manager of The Home Store, said. Linen manufactured in India is very expensive, while there is linen and then a look-alike linen made in China.
“The dismantling of the quota regime is an opportunity for retailers, to export or to source. We would prefer to source from the domestic market, which has great strengths, but we cannot overlook global opportunities,” Mr Rab said.
Admitting that Chinese fabric can be 30% cheaper than Indian, Santosh Katariya, president, Clothing Manufacturers’ Association of India (western zone), and partner, Crystal International, said the strength of the Indian market is its value addition.
“Basic garments like shirts, trousers, vests are cheapest sourced from China. They have manufacturing scale and accept orders for a minimum of one container. That leaves Indian manufacturers with two segments — the value added, with embroidery or other embellishment, and the smaller quantity orders,” he said.
With the imminent relaxation in textile quotas, capacities at garment manufacturing units in the country have been booked till FY07. Major international retailers, no longer constrained by quotas, have booked these capacities, Mr Katariya said.
Rather than India, it will be countries like Bangladesh and Thailand which will be impacted by the dismantling of the textile quota regime, he added. “We have a large domestic market which these countries lack. They are currently producing only for the export market and with the entry of China, it is they who will be hit hard,” he said.
Units catering to the $16bn domestic garments and textile market will have to scale up, merge or do job work for bigger brands since this will be a market for volumes. Size, eventually, does matter.
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| Textile exports will double in two years |
Dismissing fears that cheaper Chinese garments will hit the Indian industry in the post-quota regime beginning next year, Union Textiles Minister Shankarsinh Vaghela today exuded confidence that the country's apparel exports will double in the next two years.
''India will benefit from the free global trade by January 1, 2005 whereas China will be able to enjoy that opportunity only two years after that,'' he told UNI in an interview.
Vaghela said that in the free trade scenario, Indian products would be preferred over those from China as they enjoyed
''credibility, quality and cost competitiveness also.'' According to him, the dismantling of quota would come as a boon for India as investments of Rs 50,000-Rs 60,000 crore are expected during the period for modernisation of existing units, setting up of new plants and enhancement in production capacities that will help generate employment for over 1.5 lakh people, besides earning more foreign exchange.
The Minister said the need of the hour was to put maximum thrust on making the "Made in India" brand popular on the international scene.
The exports of cloth is low at present and demand for the same is also set to increase, he said.
Mid-term changes in policies by the Government also hindered exports, he felt. Any new policy announced should be made applicable only from the new financial year, so that exporters should make commitments to their buyers accordingly, he said.
The Minister expressed unhappiness over the partial utilisation of the Rs 25,000-crore Technology Upgradation Fund, which was set up for extending loans for modernisation and establishment of new export-oriented units. The limit for eligibility for availing TUF loans has been reduced from 25,000 spindles to 12,000 spindles, he pointed out.
The introduction of new technologies in the 12,000-spindles units will make them produce the same volumes as they had been doing with 25,000 spindles, he explained.
Commenting on the ailing National Textiles Corporation (NTC), he said that more than half of the 119 mills were already closed and most of the remaining ones were making losses and on the verge of closure.
In the case of the unviable NTC units, the Government had introduced a voluntary retirement scheme for which bonds worth Rs 1800 crore were issued.
Vaghela said his ministry was at present involved in disposing of the assets of five such loss-making and closed mills in Maharashtra, and the money thus raised will go for strengthening the profit-making units.
The Minister said that, besides the garment sector, his Ministry was also taking initiatives in promoting special zones and cluster zones for promotion of exports of handicraft and handloom products which have immense potential in the global markets.
For promotion of handloom and handicrafts in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, the Ministry will approach Planning Commission for funds, he said.
Initiatives are also underway to tap the potential for promotion of products made from jute, bamboo and metals to help artisans in the North Eastern states, Vaghela added.
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| South
Africa's Textile Industry "Hanging On By a Thread" |
ONE of SA's oldest and largest textile exporters, David Whitehead & Sons, met creditors yesterday in an attempt to rescue the company, which is buckling under pressure from cheap Asian imports.
Close to 1000 workers face losing their jobs as Whitehead , the largest employer in the small KwaZulu-Natal town of Tongaat, considers its options.
Sales manager George Naidoo said in January the industry was in "the absolute doldrums". The company's management could not be reached for comment yesterday.
A security official, however, said the company was temporarily closed and management was meeting creditors. The official said management would tell staff the future of the company, which was established in 1966, tomorrow .
The textile industry is "hanging on by a thread", said the president of SA's Textile Federation, Walter Simeoni, yesterday.
In an unrelated presentation in Pretoria , China's ambassador to SA yesterday defended his country, saying it was not responsible for the beleaguered state of the South African textile industry.
The industry was in its worst crisis yet, with manufacturers mainly blaming cheap Chinese imports combined with the strength of the rand for their woes. The industry has shrunk from employing 82000 workers 10 years ago to 60000 at the moment.
Ambassador Liu Guijin said SA's textile companies had to raise their competitiveness and productivity to compete globally.
He said China had earlier extended an invitation to the local industry to learn from Chinese textile industry experts. He said China was also open to joint ventures with South African companies.
Simeoni, who said he was not aware of the offer, said the domestic industry needed only a level playing field with China to compete .
Paul Schouten, who manages German billionaire Claas Daun's textile investments in SA, said local companies had the management expertise, technology and design capacity to compete .
"What we don't have are China's wage structures, subsidisation of things like electricity, water and rental, and we don't have a currency that is pegged to the dollar," said Schouten.
Simeoni said several international companies, including Chinese operations, had closed manufacturing facilities in SA, where government was handicapping rather than helping the textiles industry.
He cited government's recent introduction of a 25% duty on imported long, fine fibres, which he said the downstream industry needed to participate in niche markets .
Seardel, the largest textile and clothing manufacturer in southern Africa, was also considering shifting about a quarter of its production facilities outside SA in response to cheap Chinese imports helped by the strong rand.
Meanwhile, the Chinese ambassador said trade between SA and China was expected to reach about 5bn this year. South African exports to China had grown at about 23% a year over the past five years. Chinese exports to SA were growing "a little" faster, he said.
Liu called for stronger relations between China and Africa, which he said share d similar positions on many major international issues.
He said greater co-operation between China and Africa would promote economic development in both regions and give impetus to south-south trade. He said this would help to narrow the gap between rich and poor countries.
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| The new prices of the Egyptian cotton |
The new prices of the Egyptian cotton are:
-G70 : 141.50 cent/lb
-G88 : 137.50 cent/lb
-G86 : 128.25 cent/lb
The American Cotton (PIMA) price reached 134 cent/lb.
It is noticable that G86 which is equivalent to Pima cotton is priced below
the Pima cotton price which is 128 cent/lb on the 23rd of October.
Taking into consideration that the total exports of the Egyptian cotton this season 2003/2004 will not exceed 120 K Tons. |
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