Garment companies are selling better abroad

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) – Vietnam’s textile and garment industry is doing well abroad, but struggling at home, according experts.
Exports
of popular brands have raked in tens of billions of dollars each year – but
with a population of 90 million, few firms are focusing on local customers.
Instead, more and more foreign labels are selling in Vietnam.
According to the Vietnam Association of Retailers, more than 200 foreign
fashion brands are present in Vietnam, accounting for more than 60 percent of
the market share from medium-end to high-end products.
After a year in the Vietnamese market, Hennes & Mauritz AB (H&M) -
Swedish fashion firm – plans to increase the number of its stores to six next
month.
Zara also has stores in Hanoi and HCM City.
Meanwhile, other foreign fashion brands such as Mango, Stradivarius, Massimo
Dutti and Topshop has recently joined Vietnam’s market.
After a period of developing brands of Vietnamese goods, fashion firms such as
Viet Thy, Foci, Sai Gon 2, Ninomaxx and PT 2000, have forced to narrow their
production scale.
For instance, Sai Gon 2 Garment Joint Stock Company launched 70-80 new products
before but has made only about a half of this number at present. Production for
the domestic market of the company has also decreased 20-25 percent compared to
2016. Now, Saigon May 2 has accepted to lose the domestic market.
In order to survive in the market, Foci has been forced to cut all new
investments and narrowed the store system.
To compete, they are now focusing on selling uniforms and developing more
online sales.
Nguyen Van Tang, director of the Manh Cuong Garment Co Ltd, said it is better
for his company to export workwear to Japan than to sell at home.
In addition, Hoang Huu Chuong, chairman cum general director of the Nguyen
Hoang Corporation, said the trade war between the US and China would make more
Chinese goods, including textile and garment products, enter the local market.
The textile and garment companies have also faced the problem of counterfeit
and fake goods.
Chuong said the authorities need to confiscate counterfeit and fake goods at
border gates and market management agencies need to crackdown on businesses and
individuals involving in the wrongdoings.
However, local textile and garment enterprises need to overcome weaknesses in
design, materials and distribution systems, according to Chuong.
In fact, Vietnam is not lacking in raw materials, said Chuong, adding that it
is important to design products made from those materials. If they use foreign
design and imported materials, Vietnam would never have a developed fashion
industry, he said.
Chairman of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association Vu Duc Giang said that
it is necessary to start from the training stage to develop the fashion
industry.
"We need to train students so that they not only can design clothes as
usual and but also design from yarn and fabric," Giang told the Thoi bao
kinh doanh (Business Times) newspaper.
He said domestic businesses are often not financially stable so developing a
distribution system is often tricky. A solution, he suggested, would be for
different businesses to work together.
Pham Xuan Hong, chairman of the HCM City Textile and Apparel Association, said
the association has proposed creating a design centre in the city to host trade
events and encourage better connections for the industry.
Le Tien Truong, general director of the Vietnam Textile and Garment Group,
suggested the group’s member companies could share their distribution systems
and sell products in each other’s stores.-VNS/VNA