Julys textile workshops should be a season where fans spin faster than sewing machines, but this year home textile production lines are unusually bustling. American clients seem to have collectively placed additional orders like they made an appointment. Workshop supervisors look at production schedules with mixed joy and worry—this off-season boom phenomenon stems from the Damocles sword hanging over the industry:60% punitive tariff expectations.
As someone who has witnessed multiple trade frictions,foreign tradeIm all too familiar with this tariff window period frenzy. During the peak of the 2018 China-U.S. trade war, some companies turned container terminals into temporary warehouses overnight. Now history repeats, but this time the difference is:Clients no longer harbor wishful thinkingThey clearly understand this tariff will increase progressively, eventually reaching the 60% high.
Behind 24-hour non-stop workshop machines lie two realities that must be faced:
More intriguing is industry leaders precautionary measures. Three years ago, a home textile giant established a fabric + finished garments complete industrial chain in Vietnam. This year, their Vietnamese fabric factory happens to commence production.This Chinese design + Southeast Asian manufacturing modelis becoming the golden combination for tariff avoidance.
Currently, U.S. tariffs on Chinese home textile products fluctuate between 7.5%-25%, but the real threat comes from the potential 60% that may be gradually implemented. This number isnt arbitrary:
Some clients privately revealedmajor importers are implementing a staged stockpiling strategy: completing a round of procurement before each tariff increase. This explains why orders dont surge all at once but show wave-like growth.
Looking at the mountains of grey cloth in the workshop, I recall those peers who collapsed due to over-expansion in 2019. We must seize this opportunity, but do so wisely:
Rule 1: Turn temporary orders into long-term clients
Take advantage of clients urgent need for supply by proactively offering product upgrade solutions. One company successfully converted one-time orders into annual agreements by including matching suggestion cards in packaging.
Rule 2: Build a flexible supply chain
Form alliances with 3-5 small and medium-sized processing plants to avoid heavy asset pressure from building your own factories while maintaining rapid response to order fluctuations. Remember: todays partners may be tomorrows lifeline.
Rule 3: Tariffs arent the only variable
One brand insisted on using organic cotton, and clients still accepted a 15% price increase. Product added value is the Noahs Ark for navigating trade cycles.
The busy production lines will eventually quiet down, but the truth revealed by this tariff crisis wont change:The game rules of home textile foreign trade are shifting from cost priority to risk diversification,. Companies that only know how to focus on production might want to look up at factories in Vietnam and cotton fields in Xinjiang.
? 2025. All Rights Reserved. Shanghai ICP No. 2023007705-2 PSB Record: Shanghai No.31011502009912