The latest data from the US Office of Textile and
Apparel (OTEXA) reveals that US apparel import volumes fell sharply in
November, representing the worst performance since the pandemic.
US apparel
imports, according to the latest data from OTEXA for the month of November,
fell by more than 30% in quantity from a year ago, and nearly 15% in value.
The University of Delaware’s
associate professor of fashion and apparel studies, Dr Sheng Lu, believes this
is “a warning sign about a cooling US economy and fashion companies’
pessimistic near-term market outlook”.
For the month of November,
OTEXA data shows US apparel imports were down 31.8% to 1,742 MM2 in volume
terms. China remains the top apparel supplier to the US but the East Asian
country saw shipment volumes drop by 0.3% during November 2022 compared with 3%
year-on-year drop in November 2021.
Vietnam (251 MM2), Bangladesh
(173 MM2), India (76 MM2) and Indonesia (79 MM2) completed the top five,
respectively, in volume terms during November.
Lu believes the latest data
reflects US fashion companies’ continuation to reduce their “China exposure”
further, particularly to other Asian suppliers, led by Bangladesh, India,
Indonesia, Vietnam, and Pakistan.
“Notably, only 31% of US
apparel imports in quantity and about 19% in value came from China in November
2022, much lower than 38% and 24% in 2021. Notably, only 10% of US cotton
apparel imports came from China in November 2022 due to the Uyghur Forced Labor
Prevention Act (UFLPA),” Lu says.
Lu sets out several US apparel
sourcing trends that are worth watching, based on the latest OTEXA data.
“First, US apparel import
volume fell sharply in November 2022, a warning sign about a cooling US economy
and fashion companies’ pessimistic near-term market outlook. Notably, data
shows that US apparel imports in November 2022 decreased by more than 30% in
quantity and nearly 15% in value from a year ago. This was the worst
performance since the pandemic.
“Second, the hiking sourcing
costs began to ease due to weakened demand. The price index of US apparel
imports stood at 106.3 (January 2019=100), slightly down from 106.4 a month
ago. However, as the Russia-Ukraine war won’t end anytime soon and labour costs
continue to rise in many garment-producing countries, fashion companies’
apparel sourcing costs are unlikely to drop substantially in 2023.
“Third, trade data suggests
that US fashion companies are serious about expanding near-shoring. Notably,
17.1% of US apparel imports in quantity and 20.9% in value came from Western
Hemisphere suppliers in November 2022, the highest share since 2019. Likewise,
about 12.3% of US apparel imports in quantity and 13.9% in value came from
members of the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) in November
2022, also the highest in the past five years.
“That being said, in the first
ten months of 2022 (latest data available), only 67.3% of US apparel imports
from CAFTA-DR claimed the preferential duty benefit, much lower than 74.2% in
2021. Previous studies show that US fashion companies often struggled with the
insufficient textile supply within CAFTA-DR and the agreement’s restrictive
rules of origin when sourcing from the region. Thus, we shall not expect US
fashion companies to keep sourcing from CAFTA-DR without being able to save
import duties in the long run. Meanwhile, it is important to note that US
apparel imports from the Western Hemisphere typically peak in November and
December due to seasonal factors.”
Summary of OTEXA’s
apparel imports for November
·
In value terms,
China saw its share of US apparel imports drop by 2.1% in November to 18.8%.
Imports amounted to US$1.18bn.
·
Bangladesh saw
its share increase by 1.1% in November. In value terms, US apparel imports
amounted to $598m.
·
Vietnam (0.5%),
India (0.6%), Indonesia (0.6%), Cambodia (0.2%), Pakistan (0.4%) and Sri Lanka
(0.1%), also saw their share of US apparel imports increase.
·
Of the top ten,
Indonesia experienced the highest growth in volume of US apparel imports in
2022 at 28.5%, followed by Bangladesh (26%) and India (20.5%).
·
China retains
the highest volume share of US imports in volume terms, at 34.8%, but this is
down on last year by 3%.
·
Negative growth
in US apparel imports, in volume terms, was experienced by China (-0.3%),
Mexico (-5.1%), and El Salvador (-8%) in 2022.
By Just Style