Comapny Tpye: Manufacturer (OEM)
Main products: Synthetic Dyes, Textile Auxiliaries, Woven Cotton Fabrics
Report Creation Date: 2026-05-06
Paramount Textile Plc is a publicly listed textile manufacturing company headquartered in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It operates primarily in the fiber, yarn, and thread mills sector, functioning as an integrated manufacturer (OEM) with strong upstream procurement activity. Its trade data reveals a highly active and expanding procurement footprint across South Asia and global dye/chemical supply chains, with transaction volume surging over 30x between 2023 and 2026 — signaling rapid operational scaling since early 2024.
Data interpretation reveals extreme volatility and steep growth: transaction volume surged from just 38 units in July 2023 to over 1.1 million in January 2026 — a 29,000× increase — with pronounced seasonality peaking in Q1 2026. The surge coincides with accelerated procurement frequency (up to 320 transactions/month), indicating ramp-up in production capacity or new export order fulfillment. This reflects structural expansion rather than spot trading. A notable inflection occurred in late 2024 — transaction counts and volumes both spiked sharply starting December 2024, confirming sustained operational scaling.
| Year-Month | Transaction Volume | Transaction Count |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-03 | 120,252 | 283 |
| 2026-02 | 643,172 | 101 |
| 2026-01 | 1,109,140 | 130 |
| 2025-12 | 767,617 | 214 |
| 2025-11 | 195,130 | 83 |
| 2025-10 | 111,872 | 89 |
| 2025-09 | 278,370 | 117 |
| 2025-08 | 46,081 | 95 |
| 2025-07 | 326,774 | 122 |
| 2025-06 | 215,618 | 67 |
Data interpretation shows high concentration among Asian chemical and textile input suppliers: top 3 partners — Qingdao Peters (China), Archroma Singapore, and Pee Vee Textiles (India) — collectively account for 28.6% of all transactions. India dominates both count and depth, supplying critical intermediates (dyes, auxiliaries, yarns), while China contributes high-volume machinery-related inputs and specialty chemicals. The consistent ‘Maintained’ status across all top 20 partners confirms stable, long-term sourcing relationships — not opportunistic buying. Partnership depth is anchored in India and China, reflecting strategic dual-sourcing for cost efficiency and supply resilience.
| Partner Name | Country | Transaction Count | Share | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Qingdao Peters Textiles Machinery I | China | 802 | 14.32% | 2026-03-05 |
| Archroma Singapore Pvt Ltd. | Singapore | 417 | 7.45% | 2026-03-31 |
| Pee Vee Textiles Ltd. | India | 385 | 6.88% | 2026-03-30 |
| Garg Acrylics Ltd Corp. | India | 227 | 4.05% | 2026-03-31 |
| Nahar Spinning Mills Ltd. | India | 108 | 1.93% | 2026-03-31 |
| Colourtex Industries Ltd. | USA | 102 | 1.82% | 2026-03-04 |
| Kyung In Synthetic Corp. | Philippines | 95 | 1.70% | 2026-03-09 |
| Tubingen Chemicals BD Ltd. | Bangladesh | 94 | 1.68% | 2026-03-30 |
| Shanghai Propp Textile Co Ltd | China | 86 | 1.54% | 2025-09-11 |
| Sportking India Ltd. | India | 81 | 1.45% | 2026-01-06 |
Data interpretation highlights a tightly focused input portfolio centered on coloration and fabric construction: HS 32041600 (synthetic organic dyes) alone accounts for 9.76% of all transactions — the highest share — followed by HS 38099100 (textile auxiliaries, e.g., leveling agents, dispersants). Cotton yarns (5205 series) and woven fabrics (5208/5209) dominate the downstream physical inputs, confirming vertical integration into woven fabric production. Over 70% of top 20 HS codes fall under Chapters 32, 34, 38, 52, and 53 — all core textile chemistry and fiber/fabric categories. Procurement is highly specialized and vertically aligned — prioritizing functional inputs essential for dyeing, finishing, and weaving operations.
| HS Code | Description | Transaction Count | Share | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 32041600 | Synthetic organic dyes & pigments | 552 | 9.76% | 2026-03-31 |
| 38099100 | Textile auxiliaries (e.g., dye carriers) | 381 | 6.74% | 2026-03-29 |
| 62171000 | Woven fabric accessories (e.g., binding tapes) | 289 | 5.11% | 2026-03-09 |
| 52051100 | Cotton yarn (combed, <840 decitex) | 269 | 4.76% | 2026-03-31 |
| 52052200 | Cotton yarn (carded, >840 decitex) | 236 | 4.17% | 2026-03-31 |
| 52052400 | Cotton yarn (carded, 714–840 decitex) | 227 | 4.01% | 2026-03-31 |
| 52081200 | Woven cotton fabric (bleached, >200 g/m²) | 177 | 3.13% | 2026-03-30 |
| 52091200 | Woven cotton fabric (dyed, >200 g/m²) | 172 | 3.04% | 2026-03-30 |
| 34029090 | Surface-active agents (non-ionic) | 126 | 2.23% | 2026-03-29 |
| 53061000 | Viscose staple fiber (≥1.3 dtex) | 94 | 1.66% | 2025-12-21 |
Data interpretation shows overwhelming dominance of India (43.1%) and China (18.5%) — together representing 61.6% of all procurement activity — with secondary clusters in Italy, Germany, Turkey, and the USA. This reflects a hybrid sourcing model: India supplies cost-competitive dyes, yarns, and intermediates; China provides machinery, specialty synthetics, and technical textiles; and EU/US partners contribute high-value functional chemicals (e.g., Archroma, DyStar) and niche performance additives. The presence of Bangladesh itself (1.7%) suggests domestic auxiliary sourcing for logistics or regulatory compliance. Sourcing geography is strategically bifurcated — price-driven from India/China, quality- and tech-driven from Europe and North America.
| Region | Transaction Count | Share | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|
| India | 2,435 | 43.06% | 2026-03-31 |
| China | 1,047 | 18.51% | 2026-03-31 |
| Italy | 227 | 4.01% | 2026-03-05 |
| Germany | 201 | 3.55% | 2026-03-15 |
| Turkey | 189 | 3.34% | 2026-03-29 |
| Thailand | 163 | 2.88% | 2026-03-31 |
| Indonesia | 146 | 2.58% | 2026-03-24 |
| Korea | 121 | 2.14% | 2026-03-09 |
| United States | 118 | 2.09% | 2026-03-05 |
| Denmark | 112 | 1.98% | 2026-03-05 |
Data interpretation identifies Petrapole Road (31.8%) as the dominant land corridor — likely serving cross-border trucking to Indian suppliers — while Mundra and Cumilla each hold ~8.6%, suggesting multimodal use (sea + inland container depots). Notably, Jawaharlal Nehru Port (Nhava Sheva) appears as a new entry in Feb 2026, and ICD Borkhedi (INBOA6) was added in Feb 2026 — signaling deliberate port diversification toward formalized sea gateways and inland container depots in India. The high share of ‘Lost’ ports (e.g., Pipavav, Chawapayal ICD pre-2025) implies recent rationalization of logistics channels. Logistics network is consolidating around high-frequency land routes and newly activated formal seaports — indicating maturation of cross-border supply chain infrastructure.
| Port Name | Transaction Count | Share | Latest Transaction | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petrapole Road | 158 | 31.79% | 2026-02-25 | Maintain |
| Mundra | 43 | 8.65% | 2026-01-17 | Maintain |
| Cumilla | 43 | 8.65% | 2026-03-30 | Maintain |
| JNPT | 29 | 5.84% | 2025-06-28 | Maintain |
| Ahmedabad ICD | 19 | 3.82% | 2025-05-20 | Maintain |
| Pipavav Victor Port Gujarat Sea | 18 | 3.62% | 2024-03-29 | Lost |
| Chawapayal ICD | 15 | 3.02% | 2024-06-10 | Lost |
| Petrapole | 15 | 3.02% | 2024-09-16 | Lost |
| Chawapayal ICD/Samrala | 15 | 3.02% | 2026-02-28 | Maintain |
| GRFL ICD/Sahnewal | 14 | 2.82% | 2025-04-03 | Lost |
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