When Donald Trump visited Hong Kong: the future US president met Stanley Ho, stayed in The Peninsula and got stuck in Macau by a typhoon – but was he serious about building a second Trump Tower in the city?
With Donald Trump vying for a second term in office as president of the United States this week, we look back to the early 1990s when he visited Hong Kong with girlfriend Marla Maples – then seven months pregnant with daughter Tiffany Trump
In August 1993, Donald Trump visited Hong Kong with the intention of building a Trump Tower in Central. “I’ve got many friends here, and one or two are interested in putting up a building similar to the Trump Tower in New York,” Trump told the South China Morning Post, published on August 19, 1993.
Trump, who was then 47, had flown to Hong Kong from Tokyo where he said he planned to make major investments “not necessarily in Japan or Hong Kong, but primarily with money from Hong Kong,” he said.
During his four-day visit to the city Trump scoured the Hong Kong skyline to see where Trump Tower might possibly be located, while Marla Maples joined the Post for afternoon tea at The Peninsula, where the couple were staying in a HK$20,000-a-night (US$2,600) suite.
Gale also reported that Trump had visited the renowned Sam’s Tailor in Tsim Sha Tsui, which made him “a new wardrobe in 1920s Al Capone style”. Maples did a lot of shopping while in Hong Kong, too.