Taxila Services - Group Of Companies

Group Companies

Welcome to Taxila Services Commodities Trading division.  Our trading division was initially set up for certain requirements of our group.  However, today the Taxila Services Commodities Trading leverages deep public and private company relationships of the broader group to trade, supply and source the following commodities:

Taxila Cotton and Elahi Cotton

Our facilites are one of the most established mills of their kind, operating since 1972.  Our factory is the first and largest complete Chinese plant setup in Pakistan and spans an area of a 100 acres and employees over 1,000 people.   Our products are considered to be amongst the best quality available within Pakistan.

Omni Securities

Our equity brokerage house operates under the name of Omni Securities and has been a corporate member of the Islamabad Stock Exchange since the founding of the exchange.  Our clients are exclusively limited to private high net worth individuals, family offices, and family funds .  The average annual turnover for Omni Securities is over Rs. 1 billion.

Taj Mills Limited

Our warehousing business operates under the name of Taj Mills Limited and is located centrally in Islamabad. We have been operating the facility for a number of years to facilitate warehousing needs of a number of our corporate clients.

International Beverages

For over 30 years we were the bottlers and distributors for 7UP with exclusive rights from PepsiCola International. We divested our interests in the 7UP brand to Pepsi as part of Pepsi’s international bottling and distribution strategy.

Textiles

3% of United States imports regarding clothing and other form of textiles is covered by Pakistan. Textile exports in 1999 were $5.2 billion and rose to become $10.5 billion by 2007. Textile exports managed to increase at a very decent growth of 16% in 2006. In the period July 2007 - June 2008, textile exports were US$10.62 billion. Textile exports share in total export of Pakistan has declined from 67% in 1997 to 55% in 2008, as exports of other non-textile sectors grew.