Business Standard

Welspun scandal follows years of falling Egyptian cotton output

- REUTERS

A scandal involving the alleged sale of falsely labelled Egyptian cotton products by an Indian textile manufactur­er to US bigbox retailers highlights a stiff reality facing the high-end fiber market: there isn’t much Egyptian cotton any more.

The shortage of cotton from Egypt, which commands a premium due to its superior quality, creates an incentive to blend it with other types of cotton without disclosing it or to counterfei­t the label altogether, cotton traders said, exacerbati­ng a problem that has plagued the industry for years.

Welspun India has lost 42 per cent of its market value in the three days since Target Corp said it would sever ties with the textile manufactur­er, one of the world's largest, accusing it of substituti­ng cheaper, non-Egyptian cotton into sheets and pillowcase­s.

Egyptian cotton is prized because much of it is “long staple” or “extra long staple,” meaning the length of the cotton fibers is longer, resulting in a finer, lighter more durable fabric and longer-lasting, higher-end clothing.

While other countries including the US and Australia produce larger quantities of high-end cotton than Egypt, cotton from the North African country has retained its prestige because of a long history growing the crop.

But Egypt’s cotton output has been declining for the past decade after farmers failed to adapt to shifting consumer demand for mass-produced items made from short- or medium-staple fiber, according to the US Department of Agricultur­e (USDA). The decline has become a full-fledged crisis in recent years after the government removed cash subsidies, and many farmers replaced cotton acreage with rice, the USDA said.

Egypt will produce just 160,000 480-lb bales of cotton in 2016-17, down from 1.4 million bales as recently as 2004-05, accounting for less than 0.2 per cent of expected global output.

This means some products marketed as containing Egyptian cotton almost certainly do not, or are blended with other types of cotton without proper disclosure, said Jordan Lea, chairman and co-owner of cotton merchant Eastern Trading in Greenville, South Carolina. “If you look at the volume of Egyptian goods that are for sale, and you look at the volume of Egyptian cotton that's produced, it would lead one to scratch one's head,” Lea said.

A gold seal?

Long and extra long staple cotton is rare - it makes up just 2.5 per cent of annual world cotton production of more than 100 million bales, according to the USDA - and trades at a substantia­l premium. US extra long staple cotton, or “pima,” trades for 152.25 cents per lb, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon data, a 125 per cent premium over cotton prices on ICE Futures US, a contract that accepts cotton of a “strict low middling staple length”.

Ron Lawson, a cotton industry veteran and broker with LOGIC Advisors in Sonoma, California, said he had “no idea” what Egyptian cotton prices were, which he said showed how much of a “novelty” item the fiber was.

Improper labeling of cotton products including clothing and bedding is a violation of the US Textile Act and Rules, which are enforced by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

An FTC spokesman declined to comment on whether the agency was aware of Target’s allegation­s or had started an investigat­ion. Egypt’s cotton associatio­n appears to be aware of widespread counterfei­ting. In April, its executive director told trade publicatio­n Home and Textiles on Thursday that it had tested retail products labelled ‘Egyptian cotton’ and found that 90 per cent contained no Egyptian cotton at all. The Cotton Egypt Associatio­n lists Welspun as one of just three companies permitted to label its products with the associatio­n’s “Gold Seal,” which was launched earlier this year and is meant to ensure authentici­ty.

Mukesh Saviani, a Welspun executive, told the trade publicatio­n in February that the seal was “an assurance to retailers that they will not get into any compliance issues.” The scandal could leave big box US retailers wary of dealing with products labelled Egyptian cotton, potentiall­y providing a boon to growers of US Pima cotton in places like California and Arizona. “The Supima boys are doing backflips and pirouettes on their desks right now,” Lawson said, referring to an associatio­n that provides a trademark indicating cotton products come from 100 per cent American Pima cotton.

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