City
Epaper

Indian apparel exporters to see 9-11 pc revenue growth in FY25

By IANS | Updated: October 21, 2024 14:10 IST

New Delhi, Oct 21 Indian apparel exporters are estimated to see a 9-11 per cent revenue growth in ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 21 Indian apparel exporters are estimated to see a 9-11 per cent revenue growth in FY25, benefitting from the gradual liquidation of retail inventory in the key end markets and a shift in global sourcing to the country, a part of the de-risking strategy adopted by several customers, a report showed on Monday.

With the revival in demand, credit rating ICRA expects the capex spending to increase in FY25 and FY26 and may stay in the range of 5-8 per cent of the turnover.

The long-term prospects for Indian apparel exports are favourable, aided by enhanced product acceptance in end markets, evolving consumer trends and a boost from the government in the form of the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, export incentives, the proposed free trade agreement with the UK and the EU, among others, the report noted.

Apart from the benefits to be derived from the fresh capacity additions under the PLI scheme, the PM Mega Integrated Textile Region and Apparel scheme is expected to strengthen India’s presence in the global apparel trade by providing scale benefits and strengthening the country’s presence in the man-made fibre value chain.

In the first half of the current fiscal, apparel exports grew by 9 per cent on a YoY basis to $7.5 billion.

Srikumar Krishnamurthy from ICRA said that after a marginal decline (down 2 per cent) in FY24, Indian apparel exporters are estimated to report a 9-11 per cent revenue growth in FY25. Despite the revenue growth, associated operating leverage benefits and softer raw material prices, the industry’s operating margins are expected to contract by 30-50 bps on a YoY basis in FY25 with increasing labour costs, freight costs and rise in other operating expenses, he mentioned.

According to the report, recent geo-political tensions in Bangladesh could result in capacity additions outside the country, including India. "Nevertheless, the availability of labour at competitive costs and preferential duty access, given its least developed country status for another two years on exports to the US and the EU help Bangladesh to remain competitive against most other developing countries," the report noted.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPM Modi's visit to Ethiopia elevates bilateral ties to a 'Strategic Partnership'

International"Had this visit been in accordance with normal diplomatic process...": PM Modi on Ethiopia's "love and affection" that brought him to African nation within 24 days

EntertainmentOscars 2026: Neeraj Ghaywan's Homebound gets shortlisted for Best International Feature Film

EntertainmentAamir Khan says he would love to attend Kumbh Mela

FootballMessi thanks India for "warm welcome, great hospitality" following "GOAT India Tour" conclusion

Business Realted Stories

BusinessPNGRB notifies new unified Natural Gas tariff structure, effective January 2026

BusinessNext phase of construction of Vizhinjam port to begin in January 2026: Kerala Minister

BusinessBhogapuram airport to be dedicated to nation in May 2026: Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu

BusinessLok Sabha passes bill to raise FDI in insurance sector to 100 pc, Sitharaman highlights thrust on strengthening regulatory oversight

BusinessWorkers’ welfare has always been a focal point of Govt's initiatives: Minister