Shifting from trading to manufacturing was a rare choice, Expansion of production capacity: from Jervois Street to Sai Cheung Street, Co-operation between local manufactory and trading hongs

Kwong Wing Hing, where Lai Kit Fong’s husband Lee Sai Yik used to work, was on Kwong Yuen Street East in Sheung Wan. The main commodities traded there included combs, razors, hair brushes, belts and needles from the UK. From 1950, the couple started their own trading business. However, since they did not wish to compete with their former boss at Kwong Wing Hing, they only focused on lower-bracket pacifiers which only had a narrow profit margin. At last, Lee quit his job at Kwong Wing Hing and devoted himself entirely to the manufacturing business. Lai deemed that it was a rare case for someone to change from trading to manufacturing in those days. Many of their colleagues preferred working under a boss. The couple’s first ever factory was located on the third floor of 7 Jervois Street, and was named Chun Fat Plastic Products Factory. At that time, the couple had already learnt the way to operate the injection moulding machine. There was only one set of machine in the entire factory. At first, Chun Fat bought raw materials in small logs and settled their payment in cash.
When the Korean War ended, the price of plastic dropped significantly. The Americans buyers were not aware of the decreasing price of plastic, and thus didn’t request for a corresponding reduction in charges. They instead concluded the transaction by paying the price quoted at the time when the order was placed. Factories like Chun Fat made a handsome profit consequently. In those years, the contracts between foreign clients and Hong Kong factories usually favoured the latter. If the prices of raw materials increased, the factories would be compensated. On the other hand, if the prices dropped, the factories were not asked to reduce the price accordingly. To meet with the continued expansion in business scale, Chun Fat moved to a new site in To Kwa Wan where they could find lower rent and a good supply of labour. The old site on Jervois Street was transformed into a packaging workshop. Coolies were hired to haul the products across from Kowloon each day. Chun Fat moved again to Sai Cheung Street next to other plastic factories because To Kwa Wan was after all not too convenient a place in terms of transportation. At the outset, it was mainly the Indian firms on Bonham Strand that tendered orders to Chun Fat. The factories began to manufacture as soon as orders were placed. The export of pacifiers in those days was doing quite well.
Around the 1950s and 1960s, Hong Kong factories depended on foreign orders. Sometimes the factories had to carry product samples and travel to the hongs to meet clients. At times, the clients themselves would bring samples to the factories and ask for quotations. It was not common for factories to design samples, rather, they would buy ready-made samples and alter them to prevent copyright disputes. Lee was responsible for buying samples according to the clients’ requirements and he hired artisans to forge the moulds. The first type of product they made was a cosmetic kit which was then very popular in the USA. Hongs such as Wah Hing Hong and Yick Shing tendered a good number of orders to Chun Fat. Lee would confer with other factory owners to agree on a division of specialty on product types among themselves before negotiating with the hongs. Chun Fat specialized in pacifiers until the end of the 1960s. In the very beginning, most of the factory’s operational matters like production, management and training were all handled by Lai. Her position was equivalent to a general manger and a factory director combined. Fabric trading had been Lai’s family business. Being a senior management personnel, her father taught Lai the business knowledge making her a great hand to her husbands’ career.

Interviewee
Company Silver Manufactory. Holdings Co., Ltd
Date
Subject Industry
Duration 16m38s
Language Cantonese
Material Type
Collection
Source Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview
Repository Hong Kong Memory Project
Note to Copyright Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project
Accession No. LKF-LKF-SEG-002
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