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DFCC Bank and Ceylon Chamber of Commerce forge strategic partnership

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(L-R) Buwanekabahu Perera, CEO of The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, Duminda Hulangamuwa, Chairman of The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, Thimal Perera, Director/CEO of DFCC Bank, Shamindra Marcelline, Deputy CEO of DFCC Bank.

DFCC Bank PLC has entered a partnership with The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, to formally integrate Ceylon Chamber-led macroeconomic and sectoral intelligence into its service model. This strategic collaboration is set to enhance both internal expertise and client-facing value, reinforcing DFCC Bank’s position as the most insight-driven and customer-aligned bank in the country.

By harnessing the Ceylon Chamber’s deep research capabilities, DFCC Bank will gain privileged access to quarterly macroeconomic outlooks, sector-specific insights, and dynamic market intelligence. These deliverables will inform decision-making across the organisation—from strategy formulation to client advisory—ensuring DFCC Bank teams remain ahead of the curve in responding to economic developments and customer needs.

Through this partnership, the Ceylon Chamber will provide briefings on key economic indicators such as GDP performance, inflation trends, policy shifts, and global economic movements, alongside industry analyses tailored to DFCC Bank’s client sectors. These insights will not only serve internal capability-building but also enhance client conversations—offering DFCC Bank customers access to curated intelligence through strategic reviews and presentations.

Thimal Perera, CEO of DFCC Bank, commented:

“As we sharpen our focus on delivering value beyond banking, this collaboration with the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce gives us and our clients a distinct advantage. Timely economic insights and sector intelligence will strengthen the relevance and depth of our engagements – enabling us to support customers with more informed, responsive financial solutions that align with the realities they face.”

Buwanekabahu Perera, Secretary General and CEO of the Ceylon Chamber stated:

“Our goal is to take economic intelligence beyond boardrooms and make it practical and actionable for businesses. Partnering with DFCC Bank allows us to do exactly that, by ensuring that insights translate into better advice, faster decisions, and stronger outcomes for businesses.”

The official signing of the Memorandum of Understanding took place on 12 June 2025, symbolising a shared vision for smarter financial ecosystems in Sri Lanka.



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Shipping giant Maersk to take over Panama Canal ports after court ruling

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A cargo ship transports containers of the Danish company Maersk in front of the port of Balboa in Panama City, Panama, on Friday [Aljazeera]

Danish firm Maersk will temporarily operate two ports on the Panama Canal after a court ruled that contracts given to a Hong Kong firm were unconstitutional.

The Panama Maritime Authority (AMP) announced the changes on Friday, a day after the Central American country’s Supreme Court invalidated port contracts held by Hong Kong-based firm CK Hutchison.

The court ruling followed repeated threats from the United States President Donald Trump that his country would seek to take over the waterway he claimed was effectively being controlled by China.

According to the court ruling that annulled the deal, CK Hutchison’s contract to operate the ports had “disproportionate bias” towards the Hong Kong-based company.

On Friday, the AMP said port operator APM Terminals, part of the Maersk Group, would take over as the “temporary administrator” of the Balboa and Cristobal ports on either end of the canal.

Maersk takes over from the Panama Ports Company (PPC) – a subsidiary of CK Hutchison Holdings – which has managed the ports since 1997 under a concession renewed in 2021 for 25 years.

The canal, an artificial waterway, handles about 40 percent of US container shipping traffic and 5 percent of world trade. It has been controlled by Panama since 1999, when the US, which funded the building of the canal between 1904 and 1914, ceded control.

Washington on Friday welcomed the decision, but China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Beijing “will take all measures necessary to firmly protect the legitimate and lawful rights and interests of Chinese companies”.

For its part, PPC said the ruling “lacks legal basis and endangers … the welfare and stability of thousands of Panamanian families” who depend on its operations.

Tens of thousands of workers dug the 82km- (51-mile-) passageway that became the Panama Canal, allowing ships to pass from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic without having to travel around the northernmost or southernmost ends of the Americas.

Panama has always denied Chinese control of the canal, which is used mainly by the US and China.

[Aljazeera]

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India’s rise in manufacturing sector seen as holding out possibilities for SL

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India’s rise in manufacturing sector seen as holding out possibilities for SL

India’s rapid rise as a global manufacturing hub and consumer market is reshaping South Asia’s apparel landscape, creating both urgency and opportunity for Sri Lanka to reposition itself through deeper regional integration, Acting Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Dr. Satyanjal Pandey said recently at the Sri Lanka Apparel Exporters Association (SLAEA) Annual General Meeting in Colombo.

Addressing industry leaders at Cinnamon Life, Dr. Pandey said the next phase of growth in South Asian apparel will be driven not by competition within the region, but by collaboration across it, particularly between India and Sri Lanka.

“India and Sri Lanka bring very different but highly complementary strengths, he said. “India offers scale, raw materials, a vast labour pool and a rapidly expanding domestic market. Sri Lanka brings world-class manufacturing standards, compliance, speed, flexibility and trusted relationships with premium global brands. Together, these strengths can create globally competitive regional value chains.”

Dr. Pandey revealed that India had concluded a major trade agreement with the European Union earlier in the day, granting tariff-free access across more than 9,000 product lines, including apparel, with tariffs reduced from 12 percent to zero.

The agreement, he noted, reinforces India’s growing centrality in global trade and underscores the need for Sri Lanka to move swiftly in aligning its trade and investment strategies with regional developments.

He stressed that India’s objective is not to displace Sri Lankan apparel producers, but to grow together in an increasingly complex global market where buyers are demanding resilience, sustainability and regional diversification.

India today is one of the world’s fastest-growing major economies, with a large and youthful population, expanding middle class and rising apparel consumption. For Sri Lankan manufacturers, this presents opportunities not only as a sourcing partner, but also as an export destination for value-added apparel, technical textiles and sustainable fashion.

Against this evolving landscape, Sri Lankan industry leaders highlighted the urgency of aligning domestic policy and regulatory frameworks with India’s accelerating trade momentum.

Sri Lanka Exporters Association chairperson Ms. Rajitha Jayasuriya said global regulatory compliance has become a prerequisite for market access, particularly in Europe.

She pointed to the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), enhanced traceability requirements and Digital Product Passports (DPPs) as measures that will increasingly shape trade flows.

“These are no longer optional standards. They are a licence to operate, she said, adding that Sri Lanka must urgently build national support systems to help SMEs and supply chain compliance through transparency, sustainable materials and robust data systems.

Jayasuriya warned that failure to secure the renewal of Sri Lanka’s GSP Plus facility would further weaken competitiveness, especially as India strengthens its trade position with the EU.

“With India moving ahead rapidly, Sri Lanka must mobilise faster to protect preferential access and avoid erosion of market share, she said.

India also featured prominently in the industry’s forward-looking trade agenda.

Jayasuriya said priorities for 2026 include securing quota-free access to the Indian market, ensuring predictable trade flows and deepening Sri Lanka’s integration into India-centric regional value chains.

“A stronger India–Sri Lanka apparel corridor is not just an economic opportunity; it is a strategic imperative, she said.

Policy reform at home was identified as a critical enabler of regional integration.

Jayasuriya called for accelerated digital reforms, including the introduction of a fully fiscalised e-invoicing system for exporters, to improve liquidity, compliance and transparency.

She noted that countries such as India have already moved ahead in this area, strengthening their competitiveness.

The apparel industry’s performance in 2025, she said, demonstrated what is possible when factory-level resilience is matched by responsive policymaking. However, she cautioned that regional competitors such as Cambodia, Vietnam and Bangladesh continue to move aggressively on scale, automation and trade agreements.

By Ifham Nizam

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Arpico NextGen Mattress gains recognition for innovation

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(From Left – Right) Arpitech (Pvt) Ltd, Richard Pieris & Company PLC, represented by Lalith Wijeyesinghe, Managing Director, and Jayanatha Alwis, Deputy General Manager - Manufacturing, accept the award and certificate for the Innovative Product of the Year Award

Arpico, the longstanding frontrunner in Sri Lanka’s mattress industry, recently received the award for 2nd Runner-Up in the category of Innovative Product of the Year at the 2025 PRISL Industry Awards. Hosted by the Plastic and Rubber Institute of Sri Lanka (PRISL), the awards honour outstanding industry contributions to the plastics, rubber, latex, and recycling sectors.

Awarded for Arpico’s NextGen mattress, the recognition reaffirmed the company’s commitment to crafting state-of-the-art sleep solutions and providing its customers with seamless retail experiences.

The Arpico NextGen mattress stands as a distinctive example of Arpico’s vision. With its inclusion of profile-cut air-cooling pocket technology, the NextGen mattress is the product of intensive research and development, designed to align with Arpico’s mission to innovate products that enrich everyday living. Built using cutting-edge German Computer Numerical Control (CNC) foam-cutting technology, the NextGen’s design aims to amplify cooling, essentially enhancing sleep quality through its superior comfort, adaptive support, and long-lasting performance, allowing sleepers to wake rejuvenated.

Discussing the award, Lalith Wijeyesinghe, Managing Director of Arpitech (Pvt) Ltd, Richard Pieris & Company PLC, said, “The award is a testament to the efforts and ingenuity of our team, led under the visionary guidance of our Group Chairman, CEO, and Managing Director of Richard Pieris & Company PLC, Dr Sena Yaddehige. It reaffirms our endeavours to design products that integrate emerging technologies for the benefit of our customers. Furthermore, we recognise the award as an incentive to continue pushing the boundaries of our achievements and pursue ever greater heights of success.”

 Arpitech (Pvt) Ltd is a leading trailblazer in polyurethane foam and spring mattresses, sheets, cushions, and siliconised fibre pillows, backed by a corporate legacy spanning over four decades of manufacturing excellence. The company upholds the highest quality standards, having secured the prestigious ISO 9001:2015 certification. Furthermore, Arpico adheres to the SLS standard for its acclaimed Arpifoam. Renowned as a trusted brand, Arpitech (Pvt) Ltd draws from the 90-year legacy of its parent company, the Richard Pieris & Company PLC. From a modest beginning as a filling station in 1932, Richard Pieris & Company has grown into one of Sri Lanka’s most diversified business conglomerates with interests in retail, plantations, rubber, furniture, tyres, plastics, insurance, stockbroking, financial services, and logistics. It is one of the largest listed entities on the Colombo Stock Exchange, with a remarkable annual turnover.

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