Uniqlo Parent Watching for China Boycott After CEO’s Xinjiang Remarks

Yanai’s remark has become a popular topic of discussion on Chinese social networking sites and Yamaguchi-based Fast Retailing is “watching the situation carefully,” including the possibility that Chinese consumers will boycott Uniqlo products in protest, spokesperson Seikei Itoh told Bloomberg News by phone on Saturday.

Yanai said in BBC interview published this week that Uniqlo doesn’t source cotton from that region of China’s far west, where the US has restricted trade on concerns over human rights. His remark came after Beijing said in September that it would investigate the parent company of Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein for suspected boycotting of cotton from Xinjiang.

The Greater China region accounted for more than a fifth of ¥3.1 trillion ($20.7 billion) of the Fast Retailing’s revenue in the year ended August 2024, according to filings. Uniqlo was operating 2,509 stores worldwide as of the end of September, including 1,031 in Hong Kong, Taiwan and China’s mainland.

Itoh declined to comment on the possible impact of the chairman’s remark on the company’s operations.

US and European companies have been under pressure to pull business from factories that make clothes and other products in Xinjiang, where workers’ groups have documented alleged forced labor camps and other poor conditions. China disputes the claims.

By Takashi Nakamichi and Takahiko Hyuga

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Uniqlo Owner Targets Higher Sales From Strong Western Market

Fast Retailing Co. reported record annual revenue of ¥3.1 trillion ($20.8 billion) for the fiscal year ending in August, driven by strong demand for its Uniqlo brand in North America and Europe, despite a sales dip in China.

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