Bangkok Post

Fast-fashion giant Shein ‘planning Mexico factory’

- KRYSTAL HU ARRIANA MCLYMORE

NEW YORK: Online fashion giant Shein is exploring plans to build a factory in Mexico, as one of its manufactur­ing hubs outside China, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The factory, which will produce Shein items and is part of the retailer’s push to localise production, could shorten shipping time and cut distributi­on costs for Shein customers in Latin America. It follows its announceme­nt that it will build a manufactur­ing network in Brazil to serve as a global customer base.

Shein was founded in China and manufactur­es most of its products there, but is now seeking to diversify. The company sells $10 dresses and $5 tops and has taken market share from other affordable fashion retailers.

Now headquarte­red in Singapore, Shein competes with PDD Holdings’ Temu, which sells low-priced items ranging from clothing to electronic­s from China in the US.

A final location for the Mexico site has not been decided yet, said the sources, who requested anonymity as the discussion­s are private.

Shein will use funds from its recent capital raise of $2 billion from investors including Mubadala and Sequoia China to fund the expansion, as it eyes an initial public offering in the US. Despite a valuation cut to $66 billion in its latest funding round, the retailer still posts annual revenue growth of 40%, one of the sources added.

Shein, in an emailed statement, declined to comment on the plan, but said it is committed to localisati­on as it expands to new markets.

“Shein’s localisati­on strategy allows us to shorten delivery times to customers while expanding product variety and supporting local economies,” said Marcelo Claure, chairman of Shein Latin America, in the statement.

Shein is “continuing to explore nearshorin­g options,” he added, referring to manufactur­ing closer to the point of sale.

Shein recently offered an online marketplac­e platform in Brazil, allowing third-party merchants to sell their own goods on the Shein app and website. A similar marketplac­e would be launched next in the US before rolling out globally.

The Mexico factory will not house items from third-party vendors, sources said. Claure confirmed that Shein is considerin­g bringing its “marketplac­e model to other markets across Latin America.”

Shein has come under fire in markets including India, Brazil and the US for its supply-chain links to China. A bipartisan group of two dozen US legislator­s in May called on the Securities and Exchange Commission to halt Shein’s initial public offering until the company verifies it does not use forced labour, Reuters reported.

Shein has previously said it has “zero tolerance” for forced labour and requires suppliers to follow the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on’s core convention­s. A spokespers­on referred to the same comments on Tuesday when asked for a response on the matter.

Rights groups and government­s have accused China of forced labour and internment of the mainly Muslim Uyghur ethnic minority in the Xinjiang region. Beijing denies any rights abuses. Shein has denied that it ships from the Xinjiang region.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Shein logo at the company’s offices in Singapore.
REUTERS The Shein logo at the company’s offices in Singapore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand