Kitex Garments on track for expansion
Kochi-based Kitex Garments Limited, currently the third largest infant apparel manufacturer in the world, is on track to raise production capacity by over 3.5 times to produce 22 lakh pieces per day by 2025 from the current six lakh pieces of finished garments per day for new-born and babies up to two years.
the current six lakh pieces of finished garments per day for new-born and babies up to two years.
“We will be adding capacity across the value chain by increasing knitting and processing capacity to 80 tonnes each and is expanding the sewing production capacity. We will also diversify into new product lines like socks for children, baby diapers and baby wet wipes, besides setting up a cotton spinning mill with a capacity of 80 tonnes per day as part of vertical integration,†said Sabu M Jacob, Chairman
and Managing Director, Kitex Garments.
He said the ongoing expansion with an estimated
Rs 910 crore will help the company reach revenues
of Rs 2,165 crore by 2024-25 with an average growth
of over 20 per cent every year from the Rs 559 crore revenues in 2017-18.
While land identification is complete, machinery and supplier identification and building and infrastructure planning is going on.
He said the baby clothing market accounts for 33 percent of the total global children wear market. With
a market size of $60 billion,
it is expected to grow at
a compounded annual growth rate of 4.4 percent to reach $67 billion by 2019. The stock exchange listed Kitex exports 90 per cent of its production to the US and the rest to Europe and is a leading supplier to brands and retailers like Walmart, Target, Amazon, Carter’s, Oshkosh, Gerber, Buy Buy Baby, Sam’s Club, Family Dollar, jet.com etc.
The US children’s wear market had grown at a modest rate of 4.5 compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) over 2015-2019 period and is expected to continue a similar trend, he said.
CATEGORIES Apparels & Garments
TAGS Baby Clothing MarketBaby Diapers And Baby Wet WipesFamily DollarGERBERJacobKitex GarmentsOshkoshspinning mill