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20041220日        导读

2004年11月

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2004年12月

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1、澳大利亚求购文胸附件
2、巴基斯坦求购女士内衣
3、韩国求购品牌服装
4、香港求购纱线
5、荷兰求购尼龙切片
6、美国求购衬衣、夹克等服装
7、泰国求购DTY
8、赤道几内亚求购T恤
9、美国求购毛巾
10、Textile cos make big strides to see new dawn 
11、 Textile quotas: on their way out after 40 years
12、Apprentices in textile production graduate
13、China textile producers set to win big as barriers to trade eliminated
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Buy: Front clips
Looking for Centre front clips for doing up bras. There is a string pull for adjusting the centre front cleavage on a bra. Can you assist. 

Company: Forbes Fashions Pty Ltd 
Contact: Bruce Hornsby 
Tel: 61-03-95522333 
Fax: 61-03-95518900 
Address: 360 Boundary Road, Dingley, Melbourne, Victoria 
Country: Australia 
Zipcode: 3172 
Buy: Ladies under garments
We are intrested in ladies under garments and nigh wear. 

Company: Maheen Apparel
Contact: Shaista Yousuf
Tel: 021 5847078
Fax: 021 5681372
Address: 29/C,MEZZINE FLOOR,10 TH STREET,PHASE 5,KARACHI
Country: Pakistan 
BUY: BRAND GARMENT 
WE ARE LOOKING FOR STOCK BRAND GARMENT. PLEASE OFFER TO US 

Company: Cosmo business 
Contact: Lee 
E-Mail: cosmobiz@kornet.net 
Tel: 82-16-5035372 
Fax: 82-54-5712642 
Country Korea (South) 
Buy: Yarns
We have customers who is looking for the ollowing yarn for weaving organza:Polyester mono filament, 20 denier, yarn dyed.

Company: Transtec International Ltd
Contact: Mr Hermann King-Chung Chu
Tel: 852-27582686
Fax: 85-2-27582696
Address: Fook Hong Industrial Building,19 Sheung Yuet Road, Kowloon Bay, Kowloon, HK 
Nylon chips 
We are in need of monthly about 500Mt of Nylon 6 chips with viscosirty of about 2.50 

Company: Primeco 
Contact: Mr.M. Kameh khosh 
Email: sales@primeco.nl 
Tel: 31-40-2910684 
Fax: 31-40-2910683 
Address: Bellefroidlaan 12 
Country: Netherlands 
Buy: Stocks of garments 
We want to purchase quality and cheaper stocks of garments in order to next spring in 2005. Our items interesting that include shirts, polo shirt, jacket, sweater, trousers,etc.

Company: Field international inc. 
Contact: Mr.APPLE 
Email: bjlls@sinohonest.com 
Tel: 253-595-4669 
Fax: 253-595-4669 
Country: United States 

Buy: DTY
We require dope dyed polyester DTY yarn
(textured yarn) 150d/1,150d/2 in many colors. 

Company: Rasana Inter. 
Contact: Mr. Rahul Sanganeria 
Tel: 66-2-6642030 
Fax: 66-2-6642034 
Address: 32-32/1 Sukhumvit 21 Road, Klongtoey Nua, Bangkok 10110 , bangkok , bangkok 
Country: Thailand 
Buy: T-SHIRTS/POLO SHIRTS 
WE ARE EQUITORIAL GUINEA BASED IMPORTER OF T-SHIRTS AND POLOS AND OTHER GARMENT PRODUCTS LOOKING FOR EXPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF T-SHIRTS FOR AN IMMEDIATE SUPPLY. 

Company : GRACELAND INVESTMENT CORP 
Contact: Mrs.GRACE GOBI 
Tel : 240-27-30-35 
Fax : 240-27-30-35 
Address : 256 BOULEVARD TRIO SONABATA LITTORAL, BATA LITTORAL Equatorial Guinea 
Zip/Postal : 240 
Buy: Towels
Looking for single and double jaquard towel and blank valore towels in bulk. 

Company: Indam Textile Limited 
Contact: Mr. Bob Ramolia 
Tel: 1-973-4220661 
Fax: 1-973-5970317 
Address: 184 S, Livingston Avenue, Suite# 9-317, Livingston, Nj. 
Country: United States 
Textile cos make big strides to see new dawn 
WITH the global textile quotas on their last leg, domestic textile stocks have emerged as the darling of the bourses, while manufacturers and exporters of textile products are cranking up expansion plansand the level of credit drawn from the Textile Upgradation Funds Scheme (TUFS) this fiscal is expected to exceed three times what was taken by the industry last fiscal. 

As the January 1 deadline for phasing out of quotas in global textile trade approaches, textile stocks are quoting between 50-220 per cent higher than last year's stock prices in mid November, while the BSE went up only a modest 19 per cent. 

In fact, prices of 28 of the 30 companies considered for analysis by Indian Cotton Mills Federation (ICMF) quoted higher this November as compared to last November. 

For instance, the Mahavir Spinning and Vardhaman Spinning stocks were up 221 per cent and 216 per cent as on November 17, compared to the same day last year. 

Denim major Arvind Mills, which supplies to JC Penney and Levi Strauss & Co, Welspun India, Zodiac Clothing, Raymond, Shree Rajasthan Syntex and Loyal Textiles are among the stocks that have outperformed the index in a big way. 

According to KSA Technopak's Mr Arvind Singhal, the prospects are definitely positive for the domestic textiles sector as the global trade opens up. 

"The general optimism in the domestic textiles sector is well founded. But when it comes to valuation of stocks, textile companies across the board seem to be benefiting from the upbeat investor mood, including even companies that are not into exports," he said. 

Mr Singhal said that only those companies that are into the export business and have products capable of weathering increased competition following quota phase out deserve the higher valuations. 

The fact that manufacturers and exporters of textile products are upbeat and investing heavily is clear from the off take from the TUFS during the first six months of the current fiscal; the off take has nearly double of what it was for the last financial year, and is expected to be around three times last year's off take by the end of 2004-05. 

"The domestic textile sector players and the investor community akin are clearly brimming with confidence. A lot of Indian textile companies are expected to unleash their competitiveness once the quantitative restrictions are phased off from January 1, 2005. 

"The investors are therefore investing heavily in textile stocks," the ICMF's Secretary-General, Mr D.K. Nair, said. 

The country's big manufacturers are already working overtime to gear up for the business opportunity. 

Welspun India Ltd, one of the world's largest producers and exporter of terry towels, is building a spanking new factory in Gujarat. 

Arvind Mills Ltd is setting up new plants in Bangalore and Ahmedabad. 
Textile quotas: on their way out after 40 years
The practice of applying quantitative quotas to textile imports dates from 1961 when rich countries, anxious to shield their domestic industries against competition from low-wage exporters, negotiated a gradual opening of their markets to products from poor nations. 
The system was later incorporated in the 1974 Multifibre Arrangement (MFA), which provided for selective quantitative restrictions when surges in imports of particular textile products threatened industries in the importing country. 

The MFA was drafted under the auspices of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the precursor of the World Trade Organisation. 

In a report last August the WTO recalled that the MFA in fact violated principles of fair multilateral trade by discriminating against developing countries, notably in Asia. 

As a result, it was replaced in 1994 by the WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (ATC) that put in place a 10-year transitional mechanism that was to expire January 1, 2004 with the complete abolition of quotas. 

The end of the quotas has come in stages, affecting 16% of the relevant products in 1995, 17% in 1998, 18% in 2002 and 49% in 2005. 

While the system had served to limit exports from major producers such as China they were also used by others to boost market access, notably as importers were required to supply themselves from countries that had yet to fill their quotas. 

Thus the United States and the Europe Union would send cloth to be transformed into apparel in countries such as Tunisa, Mauritius and the Dominican Republic that would then be re-exported to the US and EU market. 
Apprentices in textile production graduate
Mr George Abdul, the Eastern Regional Director of the Department of Rural Housing and Cottage Industries, has said lack of keeping proper business accounts by those engaged in vocational trades was affecting the growth of their enterprises.

Speaking at the 20th graduation of 14 apprentices after training in textile, batik tie-and-dye organized by the Gratis-Foundation at Koforidua, he said people in vocational trades lacked the skills and knowledge to build up records to enhance their trades.

Mr Abdul called on vocational training centres to step up entrepreneurial training skills such as accounting and records keeping. He advised the graduands to form groups in other to access loans to start their own enterprises and that local textiles were attractive enough to enjoy the provisions of the Africa Growth and Opportunities Act (AGOA).

Mr Osei Ampofo, the Eastern Regional Trade and Industry Officer, said the batik tie-dye products had gained a lucrative foothold in the textile industry mainly because of the global market opportunity for African textiles.

He appealed to the Gratis Foundation to organize regular refresher courses for such graduands to sharpen their productive skills to satisfy the market's ranging taste of patterns and colours.

Mr Isaac Osei-Mensah, the Regional Director of Gratis Foundation, said despite the success of the programme over the years, it was difficult for most graduands to put the skills acquired to their own advantage due to financial difficulties.

He said if those who undergo the training were assisted to set-up small-scale production centres and given adequate working capital, the goal of the Foundation would be realized.

Mr Osei-Mensah appealed to all stakeholders in the training of the unemployed youth to set up a revolving fund that would be readily available for graduands.

Mr Osei-Mensah said the centre was manufacturing 50 sets of gari processing equipments for the Ministry of Women and Children's Affairs. He said the centre, which combines classroom and hands-on training for apprentices, has 82 technical apprentices undergoing training in various aspects of engineering, including 50 youth who are undergoing six-month courses.
China textile producers set to win big as barriers to trade eliminated
When a quota system that sewed up imports of clothes and textiles to protect wealthy countries is lifted next month, China's manufacturers will come away winners, an entitlement many feel is their due.
'Free trade is now paying back those countries that are competitive,' said Sun Huaibin, spokesman for the China National Textile Industry Council.
'It is an opportunity for the countries to further untie their competitive power,' Sun said.
Despite the system putting China's productive capacity at a disadvantage, the country surged the top of textile and clothing trade in 1995, as certain barriers in the multifibre arrangement (MFA) began to be unraveled. 
It harnessed the power of its cheap and abundant labour force to seize 28 pct of global exports last year in a market worth a combined 395 bln usd.
The MFA, established in 1975, allocates quotas of clothing and textiles that developing nations with inexpensive labour can export to rich countries.
'The previous system was quite unfair to China,' Hildegunn Noras, a research fellow at the Foundation for Research in Economics and Business Administration in Norway, told AFP.
But with the abolition of restrictive trade measures on Jan 1, many textiles-producing countries such as Mexico, Cambodia or Italy fear Chinese industry will roll over their textile sectors, resulting in millions of lost jobs.
'The predicted changes are a substantial increase in market shares for China and India, while previously unrestricted (no quotas or non-binding quotas) countries will lose market share as will also local producers in North 
America and the EU,' Nordas said in a recent report to the World Trade Organization.
Indeed exports of China-made textiles and clothing are forecast to soar to 50 pct of global share as the provisionary Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (ATC), which abridged the MFA, is annulled.
'Most analyses of the impact of the phasing out of the ATC conclude that China and India will come to dominate world trade in textiles and clothing, with post-ATC market shares for China alone estimated at 50 pct or more,' Noras said.
But fear of anti-dumping measures by the US or the European Union will continue to restrict China, said Dean Spinanger, an economist at the Kiel Institute for Word Economics in Germany.
To ease international concerns China announced this week duties on certain textile and apparel exports in hopes of avoiding a 'safeguard arrangement,' a provision in the new WTO rules on apparel that can limit mainland exports if home markets are found to be disrupted.
Other factors are also likely to cap China's gains, experts said.
The textile and clothing industry offers entry-level jobs for unskilled labor in developed countries and those opportunities will continue to exist for those that can fulfill low-cost production, particularly when their export 
market is to a neighboring country.
For China this means that while it still is a maker of low- to medium-end textiles and clothing used in t-shirts, uniforms or underwear, many mainland companies are preparing for a strategic shift to higher value chains.
'Chinese companies are recognizing the opportunity and want to try to improve their competitive capacity by improving the quality of their products, developing high value-added products and creating world famous brands,' said Sun.
Ulrich Maeder, chairman of the board of Polymax United Manufacturers in Macau, said that the sharply rising costs of doing business in China meant that changes in the industry are already afoot.
'Working clothes are not the market of the future in China, it will be done somewhere in lower price markets because they are given enough time to complete the order,' Maeder said.
While foreign businessmen admit that China still suffers from quality issues, the ability of mainland factories to consistently meet the high-pressure deadlines of the low-fashion industry has earned it a reputation as a trusted and reliable producer.
By comparison, countries such as Bangladesh, Cambodia or India still have difficulties meeting the stringent demands that mean either profit or loss for the season.
For Chinese companies the end of the quota regime will also mean immediate cost savings, but at the same time fiercer competition as more manufacturers from Europe and Japan and South Korea move their operations to China.
'Half of the business of my company comes from the quota that we get and if there is no quota, profits will shrink,' said Cao Hui, a manager at Shanghai Cotton Textiles Printing United Import Export Co.
'Now we need to go and find more business ourselves, so we will face a lot of pressure,' Cao said.
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