SGC · CIK 95574
What Superior Group of Companies, Inc. told the SEC could break it.
Most of what Superior flagged traces back to a China-anchored supply chain. Its finished goods rely on raw materials like cotton, polyester, spandex, plastic, glass and metal, and its Branded Products segment sources those materials and finished products principally from China — so an inability to keep sourcing there could significantly disrupt the business, while commodity price swings pressure margins. Trade policy adds uncertainty on top of that China dependence, with a new 10% Section 122 tariff effective February 24, 2026 after IEEPA tariffs were struck down. Separately, its Florida headquarters and Haiti manufacturing facility sit in the path of hurricanes, earthquakes and floods that could interrupt production.
4 self-disclosed vulnerabilities, pulled from its own filings — each in the company’s words, with the source. This is the risk register almost nobody reads.
In its own words
What could break it.
Climate & physical
- Florida HQ and Haiti manufacturing exposed to hurricanes/earthquakesmedium
Superior's Florida headquarters and Haiti manufacturing facility are exposed to hurricanes, earthquakes, floods and other extreme events that could disrupt production and delivery.
“For example, our corporate headquarters is located in Florida and we have a manufacturing facility located in Haiti.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
Commodity & input dependence
- cotton, polyester, spandex, plastic, glass, metalmedium
Superior's finished goods depend on cotton, polyester, spandex, blends, textiles, plastic, glass and metal, mostly sourced from China — exposing margins to commodity price and availability swings.
“Principal raw materials used to manufacture the Company's finished goods include cotton, polyester, spandex, cotton-synthetic, poly-synthetic blends, textiles, plastic, glass, fabric and metal.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
Geographic concentration
- raw materials and finished products principally sourced from Chinamedium
Superior's Branded Products segment relies on raw materials and finished products principally sourced from China (directly by BAMKO or its suppliers); inability to source from China could significantly disrupt the business.
“The Branded Products segment relies on raw materials that are principally sourced from China, either directly by BAMKO or its suppliers. If we are unable to continue to obtain our raw materials and finished products from China or if our suppliers are unable to source raw materials from China, it could significantly disrupt our business.”
Regulatory & policy
- shifting U.S. tariff regime (IEEPA struck down; new Section 122 10% tariff)low
After the Supreme Court invalidated IEEPA tariffs in Feb 2026, a new 10% tariff under Section 122 took effect Feb 24, 2026, adding uncertainty to Superior's China-sourced supply costs and possible refund questions.
“Already, a new 10% tariff has been implemented under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, effective as of February 24, 2026.”
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