UCMTF President 2006 Interview: France – A Country Of Specialty Manufacturers

Bruno Ameline and Evelyne Cholet, the President and the Secretary General of UCMTF (French Textile
Machinery Manufacturers Association), report on the French textile machinery in 2005 and analyze
the main trends that are shaping the future developments.



Can you tell us of UCMTF’s goals?


Ameline: UCMTF groups around 35 textile machinery manufacturers from France; their total
export is close to 1 billion Euros ($1.2 billion). Our main goals are:

* To share information and implement services among our members, make our network of small
and middle-size enterprises (SMEs) very efficient and proactive.

* To provide logistical support to our members to help them exhibit at the shows we have
selected and to enhance their marketing and sales efforts through seminars. In particular, we
organize French pavilions in these exhibitions and seminars in countries of particular interest for
us. In 2006 we are organizing national pavilions at Textile Expo Uzbekistan, at Premiere Vision
next September in Paris and at CITME (Beijing) and two seminars, in Brazil and in Pakistan. We also
support our members at ITM in Istanbul.

* To promote our sector in order to attract young engineering and managerial talents. We
focus our efforts towards the best universities and every two years we organize a forum to which we
invite textile students from all over France. This effort could be better coordinated with the
textile industry; we are working to that purpose.

* To control the number of exhibitions worldwide. As the market shifts toward Asia and
Turkey, it is more important than ever to choose among many offers and limit the number of
machinery shows. This is done in close cooperation with all other European textile machinery
associations regrouped in CEMATEX, which owns the ITMA brand and organizes both ITMA and ITMA ASIA.

Can you report on your member activities in 2005?

Cholet: In 2005, with a total amount of nearly 1 billion euros, our members registered a
slight slowdown (in euros) compared to the previous year. The 3-percent drop is in line with the
market evolution, which means we have maintained our market share. A geographical analysis shows
that Western Europe, with the exception of Italy, continues to decline but still represents 34
percent of the French exports. Growth remained in Asia (30 percent of our exports) despite a
slowdown in China, which was more than offset by very good deliveries in Japan, India, Pakistan,
Malaysia and Indonesia. About 10 percent of our sales were in Turkey where we rank fourth among
exporters, a slight decrease we consider a pause rather than a new trend. We registered very
significant increases in Central and Eastern Europe (7 percent of our sales) and North America (9
percent). North Africa was rather stable at 6 percent as Central and South America at 3 percent
,where Brazil and to a certain extent Argentina seem quite active.

By sector of activities, French machinery is not representative of the global markets, as our
companies are not active in all production processes. Weaving and weaving preparation are very
important for us with about 42 percent of our sales, then knitting and making-up with 19 percent,
spinning and yarn related activities 10 percent, nonwovens 8 percent, dyeing and finishing 7
percent, accessories and miscellaneous 13 percent.

How do you compare with your competitors?

Ameline: France accounts for close to 7 percent of the worldwide textile machinery sector not
including the production of Chinese manufacturers for the local market, on which we have no clear
and reliable data.

Anyhow, Western Europe remains the main place for machine manufacturers and exporters, and
French manufacturers are the most important after Germany, Italy and Switzerland. From other parts
of the world only Japan is ahead of us. This global market share is not really representative of
our strengths in various specific activities and geographical sectors. In France, we do not have
big diversified groups in textile machinery but state of the art, very active specialized SMEs,
leaders in their sectors of application like long fibers spinning, preparation of yarns, dobbies,
jacquard, dyeing and finishing, card clothing, ultrasonic cutting, recycling, air conditioning,
airlay and the fast growing nonwovens.

Can being an SME be a weakness in a global market?

Ameline: Of course, when one is not a large diversified group, it may look difficult to
market one’s machines in many different continents and countries, to maintain service so far from
one’s home bases but, as most of our members have already specialized on some application sectors,
they can focus on some countries which represent most of the textile market for their specific
applications. With the shift of the market to Asia (China and India, in particular), I believe our
SMEs can focus on less than 10 countries and dedicate their efforts on these. It is a big challenge
for our member companies to dedicate resources outside Europe to such remote countries. It means a
clear choice between specialization or becoming part of global groups. I believe the strategy of
staying independent may work perfectly, as often family-owned SMEs can work very well if the
decision to specialize is clear and all the consequences taken accordingly.

Can such companies offer the necessary services to their customers?

Ameline: I do not think the customers from the new Asian markets are as much service oriented
as the customers we have known from Europe or from the US.

These customers are cost oriented, they invest to produce what the market demands today, and
they look for short paybacks and quick money. Most of these customers may not request as much
service as the customers looking for long-term partnerships with their suppliers.

What trends do you forecast for the next few years?

Ameline: I expect that a significant risk for most of the textile machinery application
sectors is overcapacity, hence limited sales for Western machinery manufacturers.

* Overcapacity can be structural.

In some mature segments (geographical or application sectors), the machine productivity
increase is at least at par with the growth of textile consumption and breakthrough innovation is
rare. These markets are mostly cost driven. In the long staple-spinning sector, which I personally
know well, overcapacity is estimated between 5 and 25 percent! There is quite a lot of transactions
in second-hand machinery and upgrading of existing lines. Investments in new machines can only be
justified by real innovations that enable our customers to offer new products or reduce production
costs decisively.

Structural overcapacity can also derive from regional duplication.

In the 90s, investments have been made in Western Europe and in the US, but also in the new
producing countries in Asia in parallel. Investments in China, for example, have grown at an annual
pace of 20 to 40 percent during several years. This has led to unnecessary capacity in many sectors
and will undoubtedly result in some restructuring. China itself has to rationalize its own textile
machinery industry in such sectors as knitting and nonwovens before investments can rebound. As the
new machine manufacturers in China and India try to enter the market, which is dominated so far by
Western manufacturers, the result is greater overcapacity.

* Overcapacity can also be cyclical.

In such sectors as weaving, investments have been very important in 2002 and 2003, and then
the sector had to live with lower sales. The same applies to the nonwoven sector even though new
product needs added production capacity. With this overall trend of overcapacity, I do not think we
can expect a global increase in machinery investments but I am not pessimistic either. I do believe
2006 will show a global stability as new markets do emerge. While I think China still has to
restructure its textile sector and we will continue to face increasing competition from local
manufacturers in this market, India will grow as many projects are close to completion. Turkey may
rebound. I also have good feelings about the US market and the new European countries.

Do you forecast more mergers and acquisitions in the textile machinery?

Ameline: Our industry has already been through some major restructuring and it will continue.
Some major groups have developed recently mainly through some major acquisitions. European
manufacturers will have to face fierce competition from China and other new players. There are many
Chinese manufacturers as we said. Many of these will disappear but a few will probably become
majors, by internal growth and possibly also through mergers and acquisitions.

Chinese companies have a cost advantage and they will retain it even compared with European
manufacturers producing in China. It will be so for quite a while as organization will remain
different and laws applied differently in China. For the future, I see two main classes of
manufacturers: large international groups competing for large volume technologies and I expect some
Chinese and Indian groups to be part of these. In the second type, we will find quite a number of
specialized manufacturers; niche markets specialists that will focus on some particular
applications but with less competition. These specialists can be very successful. Manufacturers
have to choose in which group they want to be or can be and to take the necessary steps to
implement a consistent strategy.Interview



Courtesy Of the French Textile Machinery Manufacturers Association

September 12, 2006

Changes Sought In Vietnam Trade Pact

As the US textile industry’s
Washington-based lobbyists continue with their efforts to get modifications in the US-Vietnam
bilateral trade agreement, the National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO) issued a statement
saying Vietnam’s textile and apparel imports to the United States are growing faster than those of
any other country. The analysis shows Vietnam’s apparel exports are now second only to China’s in
product categories where there are no quota controls. It also shows the import growth has cut into
trade with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Central American-Dominican
Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) countries.

NCTO President Cass Johnson said the latest trade data “confirm what Vietnam itself has
already predicted — that once quotas are removed, Vietnam’s state-owned and subsidized textile and
apparel sector will wreak havoc in the US industry and in the NAFTA and CAFTA-DR regions.”

US Department of Commerce data show that while Vietnam’s exports to the United States grew
by 30.4 percent from January to June 2006, apparel exports from CAFTA-DR countries and Mexico fell
by 14 percent.

On May 31, 2006, the United States and Vietnam concluded a bilateral agreement that provides
for eventual removal of textile and apparel import quotas, provided Vietnam eliminates its
subsidies for its manufacturing industries, including textiles and apparel. The agreement, which is
a step toward Vietnam’s eventual accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), was attacked
sharply by US textile industry interests, but it has the strong support of retailers and other
importers.

The American Manufacturing Trade Action Coalition’s (AMTAC’s) Executive Director Auggie
Tantillo charged at the time the agreement was reached that “it is bound to replicate the
disastrous trade pattern the United States has constructed with China,” adding that because of
China’s state-sponsored advantages, “their manufacturers have run roughshod over US companies in
their own market.”

Pointing out the agreement will make it easier for retailers to source materials from
Vietnam and open stores there, the National Retail Federation strongly endorsed the agreement.

While the agreement is in place and does not require congressional approval, US textile
interests are attacking it on other fronts in an effort to get it modified.

Part of the overall picture is whether to grant permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) with
Vietnam. That proposal does require congressional approval, and Sens. Elizabeth Dole, R-N.C., and
Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., are blocking its consideration by the Senate as they and textile industry
officials seek concessions that will protect the interest of US manufacturers.

Ultimately, Vietnam will need a multilateral agreement with WTO members, and that is another
area where US textile makers could seek modifications to protect their interests. The present goal
is to wrap up the multilateral negotiations and PNTR by the end of this year.



September 5, 2006

ITG, SCI Annouce Merger

International Textile Group Inc. (ITG), Greensboro, N.C., and Safety Components International Inc.,
(SCI) Greenville, have announced they will merge, with the resulting company to be known as
International Textile Group Inc. and headquartered in Greensboro. The two companies are
majority-owned by affiliates of New York City-based WL Ross and Co. LLC.

SCI is a low-cost, global supplier of automotive airbag fabric and cushions, and a
manufacturer of value-added man-made fabrics for various niche commercial and industrial
applications. The company will become ITG’s Automotive Safety Components business unit, joining
ITG’s Cone Denim, Burlington WorldWide apparel fabrics, Burlington House interior fabrics and
Carlisle Finishing units. Wilbur L. Ross Jr. and Joseph L. Gorga will continue in their roles as
chairman, and president and CEO, respectively, of ITG; while Stephen B. Duerk, currently president
of SCI, will become president of the new business unit.

“This merger will represent a
significant milestone in the evolution of ITG and the textile industry,” Ross said. “The addition
of SCI’s leading automotive safety fabrics and airbag cushions business will allow us to expand and
elevate ITG’s emphasis on technology and engineered fabrics and provide opportunities for all of
ITG’s businesses to build upon SCI’s extensive global presence.”

“SCI’s automotive safety and specialty niche engineered fabrics, along with globally
fabricated airbag cushions, bring strong product diversification to ITG,” Gorga added. “We expect
to be able to benefit from many synergies in our [research and development] initiatives,
manufacturing processes, purchasing strategies and international expansions.”



September 5, 2006

Wellman To Up Polyester Staple Fiber Price

Effective Oct. 1, 2006, Fort Mill, S.C.-based Wellman Inc. will raise the price of all polyester
staple fiber products by 5 cents per pound.

The price hike comes on the heels of the company’s previously announced 5-cents-per-pound
increase effective September 3, and is the sixth price increase instituted since the beginning of
2006.

“There is continuing upward pressure on the cost of our raw materials, which have already
surpassed levels recorded last year following the Gulf Coast hurricanes,” said Joe Tucker, vice
president, Fibers and Recycled Products Group. “We cannot absorb or offset these increases and need
to work to maintain margins that allow us to continue to meet future customer needs.

September 5, 2006

Atlas Copco Obtains ISO Oil-Free Air Certification

The Belgium-based Oil-free Air Division of Atlas Copco AB, Sweden, has received ISO 8573-1 Class
0 certification for its Z series of oil-free rotary screw air compressors. The compressors — which
were tested by the independent German Technical Monitoring Association — are the first in the world
to receive the certification, according to Atlas Copco, which reported the compressors exhibited no
traces of oil deposits under all test conditions.

The ISO 8573-1 compressed air standard sets procedures for evaluating air purity with respect
to oil, particles and water, as well as identifying gaseous and microbiological contaminants. Class
0 is the most stringent of six purity classes under the standard.

September/October 2006

ATI Relocates To Larger Quarters


atihqAdvanced Testing Instruments Corp. (ATI) has moved its North American corporate
headquarters to a new location in Greer, S.C. The new headquarters, located at 203 Parksouth Drive,
has triple the warehouse and showroom space of the previous quarters. The company has retained its
phone and fax numbers, and e-mail and website addresses.

“This expansion will give us the ability to better serve our customers,” said Tim Ziegenfus,
president and CEO. “By having larger on-hand quantities of our key instruments such as our Digital
Air Permeability Testers, Nu-Martindale Abrasion Testers and others, we can assure a quick response
to a customer’s needs. Our new state-of-the-art showroom will allow us to run confidential trials
for customers without sending their samples to one of our European locations.”

ATI is the exclusive North American representative of Milan-based Co.Fo.Me.Gra. S.r.l.,
England-based James H. Heal & Co. Ltd., Australia-based IDM Instruments Pty. Ltd. and
Switzerland-based Textest AG.


September/October 2006

Datatex 2006 Users’ Meeting


A
lpharetta, Ga.-based Datatex TIS Inc., an enterprise resource planning (ERP) solution
provider specializing in textile and apparel applications, recently held its 2006 Users’ Meeting in
Lake Lanier Islands, Ga. The meeting, while aimed at the US user community, attracted companies
from all over the globe. The event provided attendees with information related to Datatex’s ERP
solution as well as recommendations from industry experts on enhancing global competitiveness.

 
bob
Bob Beecy, US director of marketing, Datatex, detailed the benefits of the company’s ERP
solution.

The meeting attracted 45 participants
from domestic firms and five international firms; as well as representatives from Datatex, IBM
Corp. and Board MIT. US-based attendees included employees from Belton Industries, Dorsett
Industries, Dixie Group, Swift/Galey, Milliken & Company, Parkdale Mills, Syntec Industries,
Kenyon Industries and Brookwood Laminating. Foreign participants traveled from Hong Kong, Turkey,
India, Bolivia and Italy from companies that included Pacific Textiles, Ametex, Vardhman/Mahavir
Spinning, Kota and Orta Anadolu. The mix of individuals and cultures made for lively discussions
and extensive learning.

George L. Hodge, Ph.D., associate department head and director of graduate programs,
Raleigh, N.C.-based North Carolina State University, College of Textiles, Department of Textiles
& Apparel Technology & Management, spoke about burgeoning textile technologies that provide
unique opportunities for textile marketing firms. Markets include sports garments with specialized
attributes; protective garments for security workers; antimicrobial garments for healthcare;
transportation and geo-textiles; and smart fabrics that can store and transmit data. He also
provided statistical data demonstrating that firms with niche markets are far more profitable and
enduring than those supplying non-differentiated products.

Olin Thompson, head of Providence, R.I.-based Process ERP Partners LLC, spoke to the group
about supply chain issues that both confront and challenge firms in new global markets. One of the
more interesting points made by Thompson — a widely known author and lecturer — is that no matter
how far a firm is removed from the consumer, the overall efficiency of its supply chain is
critical, as is the firm’s role in improving that efficiency. He also stated that in order to
obtain competitive advantage, every firm should focus on service around the sale as a key issue and
be proactive in adopting new techniques and technologies. A panel discussion followed in which each
attending firm was asked to review its current status in the marketplace and envision new methods
and practices to assure long-term advantage.

 
olin
Olin Thompson spoke to meeting attendees about supply chain issues.


The balance of the meeting was used
to explore software issues, as requested by the users, and to review new products being offered by
Datatex. The most anticipated session was the demonstration of the latest release of the network
oriented world (NOW) product, the new J2EE version of the package that offers both platform and
database independence. Machine queue management (MQM), a new scheduling tool that graphically and
economically schedules manufacturing equipment, was demonstrated to attendees. The remaining
sessions were rounded out with discussions of planning, implementation, costing, shop floor
tracking, management decision systems and the future of textile integrated manufacturing (TIM), the
current iSeries version of the package. Time also was set aside for participants to network.
Feedback from the users indicated that this was one of the most valuable segments of the meeting.

To finish the meeting, Ronnie Hagin, CEO, Datatex TIS, addressed attendees. Hagin revealed
that 2005 was the best year yet for Datatex’s US operations. Worldwide, Datatex spent in excess of
15 percent of 2005 revenues for research and development, and it was the third straight year the
company had spent such a significant portion of its income in this manner.


September/October 2006

Executive Forum: John Bakane, President & CEO Cone Denim, An ITG Company


I
ndustry veteran John Bakane started with Greensboro, N.C.-based Cone Denim in 1975. Cone,
which has been in business for 115 years, prides itself on being the largest denim manufacturer in
the world and supplier to many major brands. 

john
John Bakane, president and CEO of Cone Denim


“If you look at us today, as we have become part of Wilbur Ross’ International Textile Group
[ITG], we have operations not only in this hemisphere, in terms of the US and throughout Latin
America, but also a joint venture in Turkey; and we are in the early stages of building an
operation in China. We are well represented throughout those markets,” Bakane said. “With Wilbur
Ross’ backing, we have put together projects on the order of a quarter of a billion dollars of
investment over the next year or so.”

TW: Cone has a track record of investing globally. What is the process for
determining where those investments are made?

Bakane: The first thing is to always look to our customers in terms of where they
are headed. We say we are “the tail on the dog.” We provide the fabric; others provide the cut and
sew; others, the laundries and denim finishes; and others put brands on it and take it to retail.
So we look to our customers first for where they are planning investment for the future.

Secondly, we look to our product itself, the inputs and the availability. For instance, for
our business there is a high priority on where cotton is grown. We see three regions of the world
controlling 75 percent of the cotton that is grown around the world. The Americas, with the US
producing about 22 million bales of cotton a year and due to strong agricultural incentive
programs, we feel it is important to be in this region because of the availability of raw material.
A second place is China. China is the largest grower of cotton in the world, with about 27 to 28
million bales per year, so they are definitely going to be big in the denim business. A third
region is the Indian sub-continent, which between Pakistan and India grows about 22 million bales
of cotton per year — and that is the third leg of our investment strategy.

Then we look at human resources. We start to look at infrastructure — roads, availability of
good electrical power; and then we start to look at the economies of the region — how they are
expected to react in terms of foreign currency exchange and competitiveness in the long term.

TW: Many US-based companies have a significant North American investment in plants
and equipment, infrastructure and skilled employees. As capacity utilization fell, the idea of
moving versus using existing capacity seemed a little crazy, if goods could be efficiently moved
into the Central American region. Might this be one of the reasons there wasn’t more yarn and
fabric investment in the region?

Bakane: The bottomline decision criteria for making those kinds of investments is
the horizon you choose for the business. At Cone, we have for a long time been a long-term horizon
investor. If you go back to our founder in 1891, [they] moved from Germany and believed in making
investments for the long term. They believed in investing in communities and people who would be
there for the long term.

Going back to the early 1990s, there really was a bifurcation of the US textile industry.
Part of the industry said, “No, we are going to stay here in the States and fight it out. We think
we can do that with legislation, with cutting costs and by being as efficient and effective as
possible.”

There was another group that consisted of companies like Cone that said, “You know, in the
long term, industries move. If you look in the United States, the textile and apparel industry
started out in the Northeast, in places like Fall River, Mass., and migrated southward. It is
inevitable.” So, we are going to continue to see a migration to lower-cost countries for the
textile and apparel business, and what we need to do is to make investment in terms of
infrastructure — people, philosophies and capital. So we have had that philosophy since the early ‘
90s. We were the first US denim company to invest in Mexico, the first in Turkey, the first in
India — and we will be the first in China. We are in this business to stay; we are in this business
for the long term.

One of the issues is you can get into a situation of being in a self-fulfilling prophecy. If
you choose to stay in the States and defend what you have, you cut your costs — which means you
skimp on people development, you skimp on equipment development, and you circle the wagons. If you
have chosen philosophically to invest in the long term, you’ve always tried to have capital sources
to make that investment, but more importantly, you’ve invested in people — the development of those
people — so you can send a team to Mexico or Central America or India or China or Turkey to produce
first-quality product.

TW: Let’s talk about Nicaragua. Bringing 28 million yards and 750 jobs to the
country while spending $100 million sounds like a pretty interesting commitment.

Bakane: Yes. When I look at it, I can stay up all night because it is around a
$100 million commitment. It means 750 jobs within our plant walls, but probably when you look at
indirect, apparel and infrastructure employment, this project will generate around 20,000 jobs
altogether. It is a major project, and the one thing that keeps Matt Haynes, our project manager
here, and me up at night is that this is probably the biggest single project — the biggest building
in terms of square footage — we are talking about 630,000 square feet — that has ever been built in
Nicaragua, and probably one of the biggest ever built in Central America. So we are making a big
bet in terms of Nicaragua.

I am very excited about Cone Denim overall. One of the reasons is that by doing business
around the world, whether it’s the US, Mexico, Turkey, Nicaragua or China, we are not hostage to
any one market or government. Contrary to popular belief, China and India are not the be-all for
textiles. There is always going to be a place for China in the cotton textile business. But we have
a saying,”Trees don’t grow to the sky,” and China will not have every ounce of business in the
world. There are issues in terms of cotton. China grew 28 million bales or so, but they used 45
million bales of cotton, so there are some natural limitations in terms of growth there. If you
listen to all the talk of realignment of currencies, you are going to see at some point the Chinese
renminbi being much more expensive, and the cost to produce is going up there.

India is very encouraging, and at some point, on the Indian subcontinent — be it Pakistan,
India or Bangladesh — we will have an operation. But there is a lot of internal development in
India — to make business easier to do there — that is going to have to transpire before they take a
giant share of the world marketplace.

TW: Cone is global. Can you give us a peek inside the other regional supply chains
— Turkey, China, India, Vietnam? What are the strengths and weaknesses?

Bakane: Let’s take Turkey for instance. Turkey is a valuable part of the European
Community supply chain. They have a unique situation in that they have tariff preference into
Europe. They have over the last decade or two built a very good infrastructure. So they are at
present a major supplier to European markets. But if you look at wages plus benefits — prior to two
weeks ago because the Turkish lira has been in a free fall — they were approaching $5 an hour. This
started to put them at a competitive disadvantage with places around the world. So even among the
providers of cut and sew, laundry and even textiles in Turkey, those people started to look
eastward toward India and China as the next big growth wave.

China is going to be a major supplier of textiles and apparel around the world —that is a
given. They have the infrastructure in terms of roads, bridges and ports. There are more six-lane
highways running through China than I’ve seen in the rest of the world. Outstanding ports, and if
you go to the Shanghai airport, it is built to support their growth for the next decade. The other
thing that China has that we find unique is — because it is so big — the supply chain support for
manufacturing — things like chemicals. They have a tremendous advantage in supply parts, repair
parts and things like that.

They have a tremendous advantage in terms of building costs. You are talking about $25 or so
a square foot there, and you are talking $40 to $45 a square foot in Central America.

From an electricity standpoint, US kilowatt-hour costs are about 4 cents; Central America —
10, 11, 12 cents in places. If you look at India — 10, 11, 12 cents. If you look at China — about 7
cents. So China has an advantage in terms of power costs. So they have a lot of things going for
them.

They have some excellent partnerships with smaller producers, whether it is in Vietnam,
Bangladesh, Macau, Hong Kong, Indonesia — so when you deal with China, it is really China Inc. and
other countries that are in close geographic proximity.

On the minus side, there are limits to growth there. Raw materials are going to be an issue.
Revaluation of the yuan is going to be an issue. And the fact that five to seven years from now, I
think that more and more people will want jobs in higher-value-added electronics, cars or what have
you; and we will see pressure on labor costs.

If you look next toward India, India has very low costs and has an advantage over China from
the standpoint of raw material access and pricing. They have a plus and a minus in a democracy. It’s
a plus that people are given rights and that rights are respected. But I’ve seen projects that
have taken three to six years to approve in India, when it took a weekend in China. Controlled
economies are marvelously efficient versus democracies from a timing standpoint. So, on the
negative side in India, you have a slowness in terms of institutions; and, the Indian textile and
apparel industry has been so focused on internal markets and internal growth, that quite frankly,
they haven’t developed the expertise to do business globally. It is difficult for international
people to do business in India versus China.

Then, if we come back home, Central America is competitive with India and China on labor
costs. It is more competitive in proximity to the marketplace. It is more competitive from the
standpoint of management feeling comfortable being closer to home in Central America, as opposed to
Eastern cultures and the time it takes to get over there. But, there is a big disadvantage in
infrastructure in Central America. Shipping costs versus China — disadvantage. There is a
tremendous disadvantage in terms of power costs and reliability of power versus China. There is a
disadvantage in terms of mid-level technical expertise. India has some of the best textile and
apparel technical training schools in the world. Technical training needs to be shored up in
Central America. Another disadvantage is that China has more dollars than they know what to do
with.

In international investing, it is a
real asset to have access to dollars. We need to develop that kind of financial expertise and
facility in Latin America to be competitive.

So those are some of the pluses and minuses around the world.

TW: The Central America-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) has
many challenges. What can be done to smooth the road and optimize all the potentials of that
agreement?

Bakane: We have a saying in the textile and apparel business that “the devil is in
the details.” One of the things that I see happening is, CAFTA got passed and people said, “We got
it done.” They looked at it as, “We’ve achieved the goal,” as opposed to “We’ve only just started
the journey.” If you look at where CAFTA is today, we must have all the countries including the
Dominican Republic come in quickly to the CAFTA framework, [and] sign off so that it is a seamless
region.

There are immediate issues that need to be [solved] to get people on board [for] a seamless
Central America, there are tactical issues such as cumulation that need to be [solved] very
quickly, and then there is a long-term strategy and perspective that needs to be put in place so
that two years, three years from now, we are still ahead of the rest of the world in terms of
strategy.

Eventually, there has to be some type
of free trade in the Americas, and I am saying that as a textile person who will have to scramble
to make investments and scramble to adapt to that kind of environment. But,as I said earlier, we
are long-term investors, and we need scale, from the standpoint of size, to be competitive with
China Inc. and India Inc.



Editor’s Note: This article is excerpted from an interview conducted with John Bakane at the
Apparel Conference of the Americas held recently in Nicaragua. Special thanks go to Sue Strickland
and Mike Todaro of the Atlanta-based American Apparel Producers’ Network for
TW’s invitation to participate in the conference and interview Bakane in front of
a live audience.

 



September/October 2006

RadiciFibres Unveils High Crimp Bacteriostatic Yarns

RadiciFibres Fashion&Interiors, a
business unit of Italy-based Radici Group, has introduced two new yarns under its Radilon® brand.

Radilon PA66 FT decitex (dtex) 78F14 offers greater than 50 percent crimp and overcomes the
limitations of traditional polyamide (PA) and polybutylene terephthalate (PBT) yarns in the market,
according to RadiciFibres. Available in a basic or a dyeing-guaranteed version, the new yarn is
cost-competitive with conventional textured nylon, has very high tensile strength and abrasion
resistance, and can be piece-dyed, the company reports, adding that advantages over PBT include
superior dyeability, abrasion resistance and elastic memory. Target markets include circular knit
medical and technical fabrics, among other applications that require the highest possible
elasticity.

RadiciFibres reports its Radilon Bacteriostatic PA6 air-jet dtex 190F136 yarn offers
permanent bacteriostatic and anti-odor benefits because specific additives are incorporated into
the polymer prior to spinning. The new yarn, which utilizes Sanitized® Silver treatments, is
recommended for fancy yarn, circular knitting, hosiery and narrow fabric applications.


September/October 2006

Coating Trials Available At Monforts Showroom

By adding a coating device in front
of a Montex 6500 tenter at the newly renovated showroom at its Mönchengladbach, Germany,
headquarters, A. Monforts Textilmaschinen GmbH & Co. KG now offers fabric-coating trials —
possibly a first for a machine manufacturer, the company reports.

The coating device features knife-over-air and knife-over-roller capabilities, and a working
width of 220 centimeters. Coating processes — including paste or foam and high-temperature
applications at up to 310°C — are possible for a variety of fabrics including wovens, knits and
fleece.

To optimize process flow, the rail-mounted device may be moved directly to the infeed roller
of the tenter, which features a retractable operator’s platform.


September/October 2006

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