It has been over a decade since some Hong Kong manufacturers, responding to the mainland’s sweeping industrial upgrade and sensing rising US-China trade tensions, moved to set up factories overseas. Being nimble paid off, until President Donald Trump launched his barrage of tariffs on US trading partners as part of his “America first” economic plan. In the first of a three-part series, the Post focuses on a global underwear maker that moved strategically early, only to navigate new disarray in world trade today.
At a cluster of Hong Kong-owned factories in Thailand last week, more than 3,000 workers raced against time stitching and packing brassieres as quickly as they could to meet a sudden spike in demand from the United States.
