Tingyi
0322 · XHKG · Packaged Foods · China
Tingyi (Cayman Islands) Holding Corp., an investment holding company, manufactures and sells instant noodles, beverages, and instant food products in the People's Republic of China. It operates through Instant Noodles, Beverages, and others segments. The company offers ready-to-drink teas, juices, bottled water, and carbonated soft drinks; various noodles; and coffee/functional/probiotics drinks. It also provides property rental and management, consulting, and support services; and manufactures and sells bakery products. Tingyi (Cayman Islands) Holding Corp. was founded in 1992 and is headquartered in Shanghai, the People's Republic of China.
Industry
Packaged Foods
Consumer Defensive sector · China
Stories
Structural patterns identified in Tingyi
No stories identified yet.
Key Metrics
Track Record
Upcoming
Valuation9
Coordination
Supply Chain
Cocoa Supply Chain
The cocoa supply chain moves beans, cocoa butter, cocoa powder, and chocolate from tropical farms to global consumers, shaped by three root constraints: cocoa trees grow only within twenty degrees of the equator under specific humidity and shade conditions, most production comes from millions of smallholder farms under five hectares with minimal capital, and cocoa beans must be fermented within hours of harvest in a biological process that determines final flavor quality and cannot be corrected later.
Seafood Supply Chain
The seafood supply chain is shaped by three root constraints: wild catch uncertainty where ocean fisheries are biological systems whose yields depend on weather, migration patterns, and stock health — none of which are controllable; extreme perishability where seafood degrades faster than almost any other protein and the cold chain must begin on the vessel and cannot be interrupted; and traceability gaps where seafood passes through auctions, processors, and distributors across multiple countries, making origin verification structurally difficult.
Coffee Supply Chain
The coffee supply chain moves beans, roasted coffee, and espresso from tropical farms to global consumers, shaped by three root constraints: coffee trees take years to mature and produce one harvest annually, roasted coffee degrades in weeks while green beans store for months, and production is concentrated in the tropical belt while consumption is concentrated outside it.
Processed Food Supply Chain
The processed food supply chain is shaped by three root constraints: ingredient sourcing complexity where a single product may contain 20 to 50 ingredients from a dozen countries with each ingredient carrying its own supply chain, food safety regulation where every facility, process, and ingredient must meet standards and a contamination event at any point triggers recalls across the entire distribution chain, and shelf life engineering where formulations are designed to last weeks to months but require specific preservatives, packaging, and storage conditions — making the recipe itself a supply chain constraint.