logo
Some Walmart garment orders from Bangladesh on hold due to US tariff threat

Some Walmart garment orders from Bangladesh on hold due to US tariff threat

LONDON/NEW YORK: Suppliers to Walmart have delayed or put on hold some orders from garment manufacturers in Bangladesh, according to three factory owners and correspondence from a supplier seen by Reuters, as US President Donald Trump's threat of a 35% tariff on the textile hub disrupts business.
Bangladesh is the third-largest exporter of apparel to the United States, and it relies on the garment sector for 80% of its export earnings and 10% of its GDP. The factory owners all said they expected orders to fall if the August 1 tariffs go into effect, as they are unable to absorb that 35% rate.
Iqbal Hossain, managing director of garment manufacturer Patriot Eco Apparel Ltd, told Reuters an order for nearly 1 million swim shorts for Walmart was put on hold on Thursday due to the tariff threat.
'As we discussed please hold all below Spring season orders we are discussing here due to heavy Tariff % imposed for USA imports,' Faruk Saikat, assistant merchandising manager at Classic Fashion, wrote in an email to Hossain and others seen by Reuters. Classic Fashion is a supplier and buying agent that places orders for retailers.
'As per our management instruction we are holding Bangladesh production for time being and IN case Tariff issues settled then we will continue as we planned here.'
The hold was not decided by Walmart, Saikat told Reuters, but by Classic Fashion itself.
Walmart did not respond to a request for comment. Bangladesh is currently in talks with the United States in Washington to try to negotiate a lower tariff. Trump in recent days has revived threats of higher levies on numerous nations.
'If the 35% tariff remains for Bangladesh, that will be very tough to sustain, honestly speaking, and there will not be as many orders as we have now,' said Mohiuddin Rubel, managing director at jeans manufacturer Denim Expert Ltd in Dhaka.
Rubel, whose company produces jeans for H&M and other retailers, said he expects clients will ask him to absorb part of the tariff, but added this would not be possible financially. Manufacturers have already absorbed part of the blanket 10% tariff imposed by the US on April 2.
'Only probably the big, big companies can a little bit sustain (tariffs) but not the small and medium companies,' he said. Retailers have front-loaded orders since Trump returned to the White House, anticipating higher tariffs. Jeans maker Levi's , which imports from Bangladesh, said on Thursday it has 60% of the inventory it needs for the rest of 2025.
US clothing imports from Bangladesh totaled $3.38 billion in the first five months of 2025, up 21% from the year-earlier period, according to US International Trade Commission data.
Another Dhaka-based garment factory owner said an importer with whom he was negotiating a spring 2026 order of trousers for Walmart asked him on Thursday to wait a week before the order would be confirmed due to the tariff risk.
Hossain said he may look for more orders from European clients to make up for lost orders if the US 35% tariff gets implemented, even if he has to cut prices to stimulate demand.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

India's LTIMindtree aiming for near double-digit revenue growth by end of FY26
India's LTIMindtree aiming for near double-digit revenue growth by end of FY26

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

India's LTIMindtree aiming for near double-digit revenue growth by end of FY26

BENGALURU: Indian IT services firm LTIMindtree is targeting near double-digit revenue growth by the end of fiscal 2026, its CEO said on Friday, a day after the company posted a narrow miss on first-quarter revenue. 'If we can hit a run rate which brings us nearer to the double digit of year-on-year growth … (FY26) will definitely end up becoming better than FY25,' CEO Venugopal Lambu told Reuters. Nachiket Deshpande, President of LTIMindtree, told analysts on Friday that after the formation of a global large deal team, the company is winning more deals and adding to the pipeline. 'We're seeing the (deal) momentum continue at least in the next few quarters,' Deshpande said. On Thursday, the firm reported first quarter consolidated revenue of 98.41 billion rupees ($1.14 billion), missing estimates marginally as cautious spending by clients slowed growth in its key North America market to the lowest in over a year. Stubborn inflation, subdued demand, and uncertainty around U.S. trade policies are prompting clients to delay discretionary tech spending, clouding prospects of a recovery in India's $283 billion IT sector. The company's operating margin in the first quarter contracted by 70 basis points on-year, but expanded 50 basis points sequentially. Lambu on Friday said the company was also aiming to expand its operating margins by 100 basis points by the end of fiscal 2026. LTIMindtree's shares fell as much as 2.4% on Friday before closing 1.36% lower.

UAE developer Arada seeks $500 million Islamic bond as construction booms
UAE developer Arada seeks $500 million Islamic bond as construction booms

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

UAE developer Arada seeks $500 million Islamic bond as construction booms

DUBAI: United Arab Emirates property firm Arada Developments is seeking up to $500 million from an Islamic bond, or sukuk, two sources familiar with the matter said, as it joins other property firms tapping debt markets amid a construction boom in the Gulf state. Sharjah-based Arada would join a slew of Gulf property firms to issue bonds this year, which have tapped debt markets forfinancing needs and to capitalise on a real estate boom as Gulf countries accelerate economic diversification strategies. Arada plans to launch the bond next week and use funds from the debt sale to acquire new land, the sources said, declining to be named because they were not authorised to speak publicly. The plan was not yet finalised, they said. A spokesperson for Arada did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Arada last tapped debt markets in September for a $150 million tap of its $400 million sukuk due 2029 which attracted strong demand and offered a yield of more than 7%. In the Middle East and North Africa, issuers raised a record $32.2 billion through sukuk in the six months to June 30, according to LSEG data, defying tariff uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and volatile oil prices. Regional developers which have raised Islamic debt this year include Dubai's Sobha Realty and Omniyat, both raising $500 million in May. Arada was established in 2017 by Sharjah's deputy ruler, Sheikh Sultan bin Ahmed AlQasimi and Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal AlSaud, the son of Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal. It has projects and assets in its home country, and expects to launch sales and construction in Australia by the end of 2025. The company posted total revenue of $1.1 billion last year, up around 40% from 2023, according to a company presentation.

Global LNG: Asian spot LNG prices decline on muted demand, high inventories
Global LNG: Asian spot LNG prices decline on muted demand, high inventories

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

Global LNG: Asian spot LNG prices decline on muted demand, high inventories

LONDON: Asian spot liquefied natural gas (LNG) prices declined this week due to weaker demand and strong inventories and as buyers in south Asia found current prices too high. The average LNG price for September delivery into north-east Asia was at $12.30 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), down from $12.90/mmBtu last week, industry sources estimated. 'Prices have been in a slow downtrend this week due to ample supply and higher inventories. However, we expect Asian utilities to start stepping in to procure for cooling demand as temperatures rise in Asia,' said Toby Copson, chairman at Davenport Energy Partners. 'Demand remains relatively weak on a macro scale with European hubs reflecting that,' he added. Cooling demand from a heatwave in Japan and South Korea has mostly been met by coal, said Martin Senior, head of LNG pricing at Argus. Some production outages have cropped up, including at Australia's Gorgon's third LNG train, the U.S.' Elba Island terminal and United Arab Emirates' Das Island undergoing maintenance, he said. 'However, the outages have not pushed Asia to compete for Atlantic basin (cargoes) and current prices were too high for many price sensitive buyers in south Asia and China to compete for spot supply,' Senior added. In Europe, gas prices rose slightly during the week on Norwegian unplanned maintenance but dipped on Friday as supply from Norway rose. Global LNG: Asian spot LNG prices inch up as hot weather boosts cooling demand The European Union on Friday agreed an 18th package of sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine, including measures aimed at dealing further blows to the Russian oil and energy industry. The package also includes banning transactions related to Russia's Nord Stream gas pipelines under the Baltic Sea, and with Russia's financial sector. 'While the new EU sanctions package puts a definite halt to the re—utilisation of Nord Stream, it does not change the supply outlook for European gas markets. The 2027 Russian gas phase-out still sticks, which is why the TTF market reaction was rather muted,' said Florence Schmit, energy strategist at Rabobank. U.S. President Donald Trump's threat to impose a 100% tariff on countries buying Russian energy in 50 days failed to rattle the market, she said. 'The tariff rate, alongside the 50-day pause, signalled that this might be more noise than reality…Russia sanctions remain an upside risk although a limited one for now,' Schmit added. S&P Global Commodity Insights assessed its daily North West Europe LNG Marker (NWM) price benchmark for cargoes delivered in September on an ex-ship (DES) basis at $11.397/mmBtu on July 17, a $0.450/mmBtu discount to the September futures price at the TTF hub. Argus assessed the price at $11.435/mmBtu, while Spark Commodities assessed the August price at $11.269/mmBtu. The U.S. arbitrage to north-east Asia via the Cape of Good Hope continues to point to Europe. The arbitrage via Panama is also pointing to Europe instead of Asia, said Spark Commodities analyst Qasim Afghan. In the LNG freight market, Atlantic rates rose to $33,750/day on Friday, while Pacific rates remained relatively steady at $38,250/day, Afghan added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store