By Charles Recknagelis,
Tea and Carpets Blogspot
HANOVER, January 23, 2009 -- This time of year in
Hanover, northern Germany, the sun barely appears before 8:30 and is gone by 4
pm. And all day long the North Sea wind hurtles into the city with nothing to
stop it but the giant flags flapping over the city's sprawling fairground.
Still, hundreds of carpet producers and importers come here every January,
bringing tons of oriental rugs from every corner of the world. They crowd into
the fairground's hangers, employ an army of muscle men to stack the carpets in
chest-high piles, and wait for thousands of European wholesalers to buy them.

The vast oriental souk is 'Domotex,' the carpet world's biggest trade show, and
lasts for four days. During that time, producers and buyers strike contracts
worth millions of euros. And they exchange information about everything from
what retail customers want today to what they will buy tomorrow.
The talk is always a lively mix of business hopes and fears. But this year it is
mostly about one thing: the economic downturn. All the producers, from Turkey,
to Iran, to India are feeling the collapse of the housing market in the West
because sales of home furnishings and carpets connect directly to the sales of
new homes.

The connection is simple enough. When people buy new
homes, they like to decorate them. But now the housing market slump that began
in America is reverberating across Europe and people are trying to save or sell
properties, not buy new ones.
Many producers predict the economic downturn will further polarize the carpet
world into high-end and low-end producers. Mid-range producers, already under
the stress of rising labor costs, could find it increasingly difficult to stay
in business.
Habib Bayat is one of the partners of the high-end producer Bayat Nomad Gaminchi
of Tehran and Los Angeles. He takes a moment to consider the trend as he and his
daughter, who is also a carpet designer, show buyers their new collection.
The company's stand, like those of the other top-quality producers at the fair,
is a glass-walled enclosure that affords some refuge from the bazaar-like hubbub
around it. Inside, like a showroom, the walls are hung with luxurious carpets in
rich natural colors. One of them is already marked sold. It will be packed up by
the muscle men and dispatched to a home on the other side of the world: Denver,
Colorado.

Bayat says that the market downturn comes as many Iranian producers are
struggling to retain skilled weavers. "In the last three years, our pay to
weavers has gone up two and-a-half times," he says.
Even at the best of times, he notes, producers, cannot pass on such a sharp
increase to the market. Now, with the economic downturn, the higher volume of
sales that producers depend upon to offset higher costs becomes harder to
achieve.
Why are weaving costs going up in Iran?
Bayat says there are two reasons.
One is an out-migration of weavers to other jobs, creating a bidding game among
producers for the weavers who remain.
"In Iran, young people are influenced by what is on television, so girls don't
want to weave carpets," he says. Instead, they want jobs in factories or in
agriculture. People regard factory work as modern and guaranteeing a future - an
image that traditional work does not have.
The second reason for rising costs is inflation. In Iraq, inflation is in double
digits, consistently cutting into the buying power of the rial.
Bayat, whose smaller rugs sell at $700 a square meter wholesale, serves a luxury
niche that is unlikely to flee to lower-cost products. But even his company
cannot afford to be passive. It stakes its future on a natural dye plant it
built near Shiraz 16 years ago. To date, the plant has developed a palette of
140 vegetable dyes. That means continual R&D costs but gives the carpets a clear
competitive advantage as they show off as many as 25 natural colors at once.
Most mid-range Iranian producers have no such strong capabilities to keep
customers from looking for lower-cost alternatives. So, they worry, and one
glance around Domotex is enough to see why.
All over the trading floor, there is a rising tide of competitors from India and
China - weaving powerhouses that are able to make technically sound copies of
Persian carpets. They can pass on their own lower domestic labor costs to
consumers, and many consumers do not require Persian carpets to be woven in
Iran.
At another stand, the Hamburg importer and exporter
Djavad Nobari covers the floor with its specialty: over-sized Persian carpets.
For two generations, the company has supplied 12-meter square rugs for European
dining rooms and living rooms. But now, big rugs are not selling like they used
to.

Shahin, one of the younger generation of the family-owned business, gives some
statistics. "Four years ago, we brought 60 to 70 12-meter carpets to the trade
show," he says. "Now, we bring just 20 to 30."
The biggest sizes that sell readily now, he adds, are 9-meter-square rugs. He
says that reflects the slowing market - "2006 was the last great year" - and
changing lifestyles. More and more European homes have high-gloss laminated
floors that look nice with smaller, accent carpets. The days of covering dull,
scuffed floors with room-sized rugs are ending.
Shahin, who was born in Germany, is fully in tune with European customers. So
much so, that the current market downturn does not worry him as much as a
longer-term cultural trend: the fading interest in oriental carpets among young
people.
"The biggest problem in the Persian carpet trade is marketing," he says. "We
don't show customers how good a carpet can look in their homes."
On his computer, he displays what he hopes will be the answer. It is a series of
advertisements depicting contemporary living rooms with oriental carpets on the
floor. The combinations are striking, including a curvilinear white Nain beside
a geometric chrome and black-leather sofa.
It's no longer enough for retailers to put a picture of a rug in the newspaper
with their company logo over it, the dealer says. Carpet sellers have to make
owning a carpet desirable -- desirable enough to weather market storms. And the
current storm may be just the time to begin.
(Photos courtesy of Domotex and Djavad Nobari)
Related Links:
About the author:
Charles Recknagel is an American journalist living in Prague. He travels from
time to time to the east. That is where he caught the carpet bug. He now tries
to keep up with his interest by blogging (Tea and Carpets Blogspot:
http://tea-and-carpets.blogspot.com).
... Payvand News - 01/27/09 ... --