Last I'd looked at Fluke, the markup is too high and the tech is bland. It was thermal imaging cameras and I went with the Flirs, for corporate use.
Fluke multimeters are unparalleled for quality but Fortive abandoned development. The 87V-MAX is quite the embarrassment to roll out, instead of putting it on a diet they fattened it up, price included at $520 USD. It is a nothing burger, a revamp of an old product.
Either you're in the game or not. Old Fluke developed thin-film resistors, custom multimeter silicon, new functions, new features, innovation - decades ago. All of which you must have to be competitive. Even the $500-league product R&D has benefits to the entire company but intangible as far as 'management by numbers' so the beancounters are against it.
Farming it out to a company in Taiwan means you're using the same DMM chip as everybody else, with the same core features as everybody else.
Today's business model, buy something from china put your name brand on it, sell for profit - you have no engineering base, no IP that you own, decimate local manufacturing and employment, your supply chain is extremely fragile, and managing quality issues becomes the central preoccupation.
I don't expect low-end gear possible to be made in USA, but the evil temptation to get bits and pieces of your high-end products done in low-end town, is very great. The 87 plastics were USA injection molded and top quality. Do you expect that today? Did the price come down when the input jack plastics got offshored? Na, it's all about returning value to shareholders.