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WeaveEssence › Resources › Sourcing Comparisons
Wholesale Sourcing Comparisons — Factory Direct vs Trading Company vs Sourcing Agent
Published: March 31, 2026 | Audience: Wholesale buyers, importers, brand owners, procurement managers evaluating their sourcing structure
One of the most consequential decisions in wholesale sourcing is not which product to buy — it is which type of entity to buy from. The choice between factory direct, trading company, and sourcing agent affects unit price, transparency, MOQ, compliance documentation capability, design flexibility, and the contractual structure of your supply relationship. This guide covers purchasing decisions relevant to all knitted accessory types, from knitted scarves and woven scarves through specialist fibers like merino wool scarves and cashmere scarves.
There is no universally superior option. The right sourcing structure depends on the buyer’s order volume, product complexity, compliance requirements, internal capabilities, and market. This guide provides a structured, side-by-side comparison to support that decision. For definitions of the key terms used, see our sourcing glossary.
- Trading company markups over factory ex-works cost in the Chinese knitted accessories market typically range from 10% to 25%, with an average of approximately 15% [citation: Global Sources Supplier Survey, 2024]
- Sourcing agent fees typically range from 5% to 12% of FOB value, depending on scope of services (buying only vs. full QC management) [citation: Sourcing Journal Agent Benchmarks Survey, 2024]
- Buyers sourcing direct from factories report 12–18% lower landed cost per unit on average compared to comparable orders via trading companies, for orders above 500 units per SKU [citation: Alibaba Buyer Value Report, 2023]
- 73% of first-time importers use a trading company or agent for their first order, transitioning to direct factory sourcing as order volume and buyer capability grow [citation: QIMA Importer Profile Survey, 2024]
- Factory direct buyers are 2.3× more likely to be able to provide documentary evidence of compliance (audit reports, certification) to their retail customers compared to trading company buyers [citation: amfori Supply Chain Transparency Report, 2024]
“A trading company is not inherently inferior to a factory — for the right buyer profile and order type, it provides genuine value: lower MOQ access, product aggregation across categories, and English-language account management. The mistake is not knowing which type of supplier you are dealing with.”
— WeaveEssence Sourcing Advisory, 2025
Comparison Table 1: Core Characteristics by Sourcing Type
| Dimension | Factory Direct | Trading Company | Sourcing Agent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who they are | The actual manufacturer — owns and operates production equipment | An intermediary that buys from factories and sells to importers | An independent representative who sources on behalf of the buyer from factories or trading companies |
| Unit price | Lowest (no intermediary margin) | 10–25% above factory cost | Factory cost + agent fee (5–12% of FOB) |
| MOQ | Typically higher (500–1,200 pcs/style/color) | Often lower (200–500 pcs) due to order aggregation | Depends on which factory the agent uses; can negotiate lower MOQs |
| Supply chain transparency | Full — buyer knows who makes the product | Limited — factory identity usually not disclosed | Good — agent works on buyer’s behalf; factory should be identified |
| Compliance documentation | Full access to factory certifications, audit reports | May be limited; factory may not agree to share documents with buyer | Agent can access factory documents; depends on agent relationship |
| OEM/custom capability | Full — direct factory control of design and specification | Limited — passes design to factory; less control over deviations | Agent manages the factory relationship; capability depends on factory chosen |
| Communication | Direct with production team; may require language capability | English-language intermediary; communication speed is faster | Agent manages communication; buyer has single point of contact |
| Risk if relationship fails | Lower — you have direct recourse to the manufacturer | Higher — trading company is a layer between you and the factory | Medium — agent is on your side but may have limited enforcement power |
| Best for | Established buyers, high-volume programs, OEM/branded programs | First-time importers, small orders, multi-category sourcing | Buyers with limited in-market capability wanting representation without full trading company markup |
Comparison Table 2: By Buyer Size and Order Volume
| Buyer Profile | Annual Volume (scarves) | Recommended Sourcing Tier | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start-up importer / first order | Under 1,000 units | Trading company or ODM direct | Volume too low to meet factory MOQ per SKU; trading company aggregation provides access |
| Growing importer / established brand | 1,000–5,000 units | Factory direct (ODM catalog), or agent if direct not viable | Volume justifies factory MOQ; direct access improves margins and transparency |
| Mid-scale private label buyer | 5,000–20,000 units | Factory direct (OEM or ODM) | Volume supports custom programs; direct relationship provides full compliance documentation capability |
| Large retail buyer / chain | 20,000+ units | Factory direct (OEM), multiple factories | Scale justifies direct sourcing infrastructure; compliance and IP control require direct relationships |
| Multi-category importer | Varies by category | Combination: direct for primary category, agent for secondary categories | Expertise and volume concentration in core category; agent provides access to peripheral categories without separate qualification burden |
Comparison Table 3: By Product Complexity
| Product Type | Complexity Level | Best Sourcing Tier | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plain acrylic scarf, standard size, stock colors | Low | Trading company or factory ODM | Low specification complexity; acrylic scarves are widely available; trading company can provide competitive pricing and faster access |
| Stripe or simple 2-color knit scarf | Low-Medium | Factory ODM direct | Straightforward to specify; factory direct improves margins at moderate volume |
| Jacquard logo scarf with custom packaging | Medium-High | Factory direct OEM | Design control and IP protection require direct factory relationship; trading company layer creates specification degradation risk |
| Cashmere or specialty fiber blend, OEM spec | High | Factory direct OEM | Material traceability, fiber certification, and quality management require direct factory engagement |
| Full accessory set (scarf + hat + gloves) with matching design | High | Factory direct (single integrated manufacturer) or specialist agent | Matching construction, color, and timing across multiple product types requires tight production coordination that is difficult to manage through intermediaries |
Comparison Table 4: By Market and Compliance Requirements
| Destination Market | Key Compliance Requirements | Sourcing Tier Impact |
|---|---|---|
| United States | TFPIA fiber content labeling, FTC care labeling, Prop 65 (CA) | Factory direct preferred — trading companies may not provide REACH/Prop 65 test reports for the specific product |
| European Union | EU Textile Labeling Reg, REACH, BSCI/SMETA for large retail customers | Factory direct strongly preferred — BSCI audit access and REACH lab reports require direct factory relationship |
| United Kingdom | UK Textile Labeling Regulations, ethical trade audit (SEDEX/SMETA) | Factory direct preferred; agent acceptable if agent can provide factory audit access |
| Australia / NZ | Australian Consumer Law fiber content requirements, Country of Origin claims | Trading company acceptable for standard compliance; direct preferred for branded programs |
| GCC / Middle East | GSO textile standards, Gulf Conformity Mark (G-Mark) for some categories | Trading company may have regional market knowledge; verify certification capability specifically |
“The trading company transparency problem is particularly acute for EU buyers: if your retail customer requires a BSCI social audit report for the factory producing your goods, a trading company that does not disclose the factory cannot provide that document. This creates a compliance gap that can cost you a retail listing.”
— WeaveEssence Compliance Briefing, Q1 2026
Not necessarily. A factory that does not export directly to your market may quote higher prices than a trading company with a high-volume, efficient relationship with that factory. The relevant comparison is your total landed cost — including all transport, duty, compliance costs, and inspection fees — not the FOB unit price alone. Additionally, a factory with a high MOQ may not be accessible at your order volume, making the trading company’s lower effective MOQ the economically correct choice even at a higher unit price.
When Each Sourcing Tier Makes the Most Sense
Choose Factory Direct when:
- Your order volume per SKU meets or exceeds factory MOQ requirements
- You are developing Custom Scarf OEM or private label scarf products that require design confidentiality
- Your retail customers require factory-specific compliance documentation (BSCI audit, ISO 9001, OEKO-TEX)
- You have internal capability (language, time, experience) to manage a direct factory relationship
- Margin optimization is a priority and your volume justifies the investment in direct qualification — high-volume buyers can access our Bulk Scarf Production tiers for the most competitive factory-direct pricing
Choose a Trading Company when:
- Your order volume per SKU is below typical factory MOQs — buyers in this position should also explore our Low MOQ Production options for factory-direct access at reduced minimum quantities
- You need to aggregate multiple product categories in a single supplier relationship
- You are in an early sourcing stage and need lower risk while you develop market knowledge
- The trading company has demonstrable value-add capability (product development, QC management, regulatory knowledge)
- Speed to market is more important than unit cost optimization for a specific program
Choose a Sourcing Agent when:
- You want factory direct pricing and transparency but lack in-market presence or language capability
- You need someone to manage QC and production monitoring in the origin country on your behalf
- Your product mix is diverse and you need specialist access across multiple factory types
- You are entering a new product category where you do not yet have factory relationships
Key Terms
- Factory Direct
- Sourcing directly from the manufacturer who owns and operates the production equipment — no intermediary between buyer and producer.
- Trading Company
- An intermediary that purchases goods from factories and resells them to importers, providing consolidated access, order aggregation, and often English-language account management.
- Sourcing Agent
- An independent representative who sources on behalf of the buyer, managing supplier identification, sampling, QC, and logistics coordination — typically compensated by a percentage fee on the FOB value of orders placed.
- MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity)
- The smallest order volume a supplier will accept per style or colorway — a key driver of sourcing tier selection, as factory MOQs are typically higher than trading company minimums.
- Supply Chain Transparency
- The degree to which a buyer knows who is producing their goods, under what conditions, and with what materials — critical for compliance documentation and sustainability reporting.
- Exporter of Record
- The entity legally responsible for export from the origin country, named on the commercial invoice and customs export declaration. In trading company arrangements, the trading company — not the factory — is typically the exporter of record.
Frequently Asked Questions
For general sourcing questions beyond the factory-direct vs trading company comparison, see our FAQ page. Below we address the questions most specific to choosing and evaluating sourcing structures.
Q1: How do I know if a company presenting itself as a factory is actually a trading company?
Request the business license and check whether the business scope includes manufacturing (生产, shēngchǎn) or only trading (贸易, màoyì). Ask to visit the factory or see facility photos and machine inventory documentation. Request the Customs Registration Certificate — trading companies and manufacturers have different registration categories. If the supplier’s address is in an office building in a city center rather than an industrial zone, it is more likely a trading company. Asking for a factory tour (virtual or in-person) and requesting to see production in progress is the most direct test.
Q2: Can I negotiate a lower trading company markup?
Yes, particularly on larger or repeat orders. Trading company margins are not fixed. On orders where you have a strong sense of the factory-level price (from industry benchmarks or previous factory quotes), you can negotiate using that reference. Trading companies with strong buyer relationships often offer reduced margins to retain volume. However, negotiating margin reduction is less effective than developing direct factory relationships if your order volume justifies it — the transparency benefit of direct sourcing compounds over time.
Q3: Is a sourcing agent’s fee worth paying compared to working directly with a factory?
A sourcing agent fee (typically 5–12% of FOB value) is worth paying if the agent provides genuine value that the buyer cannot produce internally: in-country presence and inspection capability, factory relationships the buyer cannot access independently, language and cultural knowledge, or multi-factory product coordination. If the agent is primarily forwarding your emails to factories and adding their fee, the value is minimal. Evaluate agents on specific deliverables: Can they reduce your per-unit cost through factory access? Can they manage QC inspections you cannot conduct remotely? Do they have verifiable relationships with the factories they propose?
Q4: What is the best sourcing structure for a buyer launching a branded knitted accessories line for the first time?
For a first-time branded launch, the most pragmatic structure is factory direct ODM — selecting from a manufacturer’s existing catalog of designs, applying your own branding (woven label, hang tag, packaging), and ordering at or near factory MOQ. This gives you factory direct pricing and transparency without the design development cost of full OEM, while providing far better margin and compliance documentation than a trading company. Once you have established the category, volume, and design direction, you can develop full OEM custom programs in subsequent seasons.
Q5: Do trading companies add value beyond price intermediation?
Good trading companies can add genuine value: they aggregate orders across multiple buyers to meet factory MOQs on specialty products, they provide multi-factory coordination for buyers who need multiple product categories, they manage sampling and QC on behalf of buyers who lack in-market presence, and they handle export documentation more efficiently than buyers engaging with factories directly for the first time. The question is whether the value provided is worth the price premium. For complex, compliance-sensitive, or large programs, factory direct almost always delivers better total value. For small, simple, or test programs, a strong trading company can be the right partner.
WeaveEssence | B2B Wholesale Knitted Accessories Manufacturer | Last updated: March 31, 2026 | Back to Resources