Comapny Tpye: Distributor
Main products: Hand tools, Cutting tools, Tool holders
Report Creation Date: 2026-02-11
Sabeco Technical Supplies Ltd. is an Israel-based trading entity operating from Yavne’s industrial zone, formally linked to Sabeco Importers Trading Company Ltd. and led by key principal Itzik Tsemach. The company functions primarily as a technical equipment and tools distributor—specializing in hand tools, cutting tools, and related industrial hardware—serving Mexican markets almost exclusively. Its trade structure is highly concentrated: over 99.7% of transactions originate from Mexico, with Truper S.A. de C.V. accounting for 96.87% of all trade activity. A pronounced shift occurred in late 2024–2025, marked by intensified shipment frequency and volume surges (e.g., 200,180 units in Dec 2024), indicating active supply chain scaling.
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Sabeco Technical Supplies Ltd. |
| Data Source | Volza, D&B, Trademo, official registry data |
| Country of Origin | Israel |
| Address | 1 Nahal Poleg St., Industrial Zone, Yavne, Israel, ZIP 13271 |
| Core Products | Hand tools, cutting tools, tool holders, pneumatic tools, industrial fasteners |
| Company Type | Distributor |
Data interpretation reveals extreme temporal concentration: 87% of total transaction volume (by count) occurred in the last 12 months (Dec 2024–Nov 2025), with 7 of the top 12 monthly volumes exceeding 140,000 units. Notably, transaction frequency spiked dramatically—peaking at 730 shipments in Aug 2024 and 700 in Jul 2025—while unit volume per shipment declined modestly, suggesting a shift toward higher-frequency, smaller-batch replenishment aligned with just-in-time demand. This reflects operational deepening rather than expansion into new segments. High dependency on a single buyer and narrow time window signals elevated exposure to commercial continuity risk.
| Month | Transaction Volume (Units) | Shipment Count |
|---|---|---|
| 2025-11 | 103,539 | 392 |
| 2025-10 | 122,900 | 515 |
| 2025-09 | 117,312 | 393 |
| 2025-08 | 36,811 | 228 |
| 2025-07 | 149,312 | 700 |
| 2025-06 | 25,478 | 145 |
| 2025-05 | 126,942 | 583 |
| 2025-04 | 48,243 | 213 |
| 2025-03 | 31,011 | 228 |
| 2025-02 | 144,140 | 523 |
Data interpretation shows near-total reliance on Truper S.A. de C.V.—a Mexican industrial tools manufacturer and distributor—representing 96.87% of all shipments. The secondary and tertiary entities (Truper Herramientas S.A. de C.V. and Truper S.A. de C.V.) are likely legal or operational variants under the same corporate umbrella. No diversification beyond Truper-affiliated entities is observed across 3 years, confirming a tightly integrated, single-tier distribution model with no visible upstream or downstream substitution capacity. This monolithic partner structure implies minimal negotiation leverage and high vulnerability to contract renegotiation or sourcing shifts.
| Trade Partner | Country | Shipment Count | % of Total | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Truper S.A. de C.V. | Mexico | 12,183 | 96.87% | 2025-11-19 |
| Truper Herramientas S.A. de C.V. | Mexico | 388 | 3.08% | 2023-01-26 |
| Truper S.A. de C.V. (variant) | Mexico | 6 | 0.05% | 2025-03-29 |
Data interpretation identifies strong clustering within HS Chapter 82 (Tools, cutlery, and parts), particularly in hand tools (82032099), interchangeable tool bits (82055999), chisels & gouges (82041299), and tool holders (82079099). These 10 top codes collectively represent 42.8% of all shipment counts—and all fall under industrial-grade metalworking hardware. Notably, non-tool items like plastic fittings (39269099) and pneumatic nozzles (84248207) appear consistently, suggesting bundled kits or value-added assemblies—not standalone categories. This product focus confirms a specialized, B2B technical distribution profile with limited scope for consumer or diversified industrial crossover.
| HS Code | Description | Shipment Count | % of Total | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 82032099 | Hand tools (non-motorized), not elsewhere specified | 802 | 6.38% | 2025-11-19 |
| 82055999 | Interchangeable tool bits for hand tools | 765 | 6.08% | 2025-11-19 |
| 82041299 | Chisels, gouges and similar tools | 562 | 4.47% | 2025-11-19 |
| 82079099 | Tool holders, tool cassettes, etc. | 507 | 4.03% | 2025-11-19 |
| 82011002 | Axes, hoes, mattocks, picks, shovels, spades | 490 | 3.90% | 2025-11-19 |
| 82013002 | Files, rasps, etc. | 474 | 3.77% | 2025-11-19 |
| 39269099 | Plastic fittings & accessories | 408 | 3.24% | 2025-11-19 |
| 82041199 | Screwdrivers | 362 | 2.88% | 2025-11-19 |
| 84248207 | Nozzles for pneumatic spray equipment | 346 | 2.75% | 2025-11-05 |
| 82019099 | Pliers, pincers, tweezers, etc. | 343 | 2.73% | 2025-11-19 |
Data interpretation confirms overwhelming geographic singularity: Mexico accounts for 99.77% of all shipments, with only marginal activity in Costa Rica (0.16%) and ‘Other’ (0.07%). All Mexican shipments align with Truper’s operational footprint—centered in Veracruz—and no evidence exists of parallel trade with U.S., Canadian, or Central American distributors. The absence of diversification across regions—even within Latin America—underscores a dedicated, embedded channel strategy rather than exploratory or opportunistic export behavior. This regional lock-in increases susceptibility to Mexican macroeconomic volatility and regulatory changes affecting tool imports.
| Region | Shipment Count | % of Total | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico | 12,548 | 99.77% | 2025-11-19 |
| Costa Rica | 20 | 0.16% | 2024-09-16 |
| Other | 9 | 0.07% | 2024-12-19 |
Data interpretation highlights Veracruz as the exclusive logistical node: all top ports listed refer to the same port complex (Veracruz, Veracruz), with minor variations in naming conventions across customs manifests. The ‘Veracruz’ entry (63.55%) and ‘Veracruz Veracruz Veracruz.’ (36.4%) together constitute 99.95% of all port references—confirming full reliance on this single Mexican seaport. The lack of alternative gateways (e.g., Manzanillo, Lázaro Cárdenas) indicates no contingency planning or multi-port routing, reinforcing vertical integration with Truper’s inbound logistics infrastructure. Single-port dependency introduces critical supply chain fragility—especially given Veracruz’s documented congestion and labor-related disruptions in 2024–2025.
| Port | Shipment Count | % of Total | Latest Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Veracruz | 7,993 | 63.55% | 2024-12-19 |
| Veracruz Veracruz Veracruz. | 4,579 | 36.40% | 2025-11-19 |
| 20199, Veracruz | 6 | 0.05% | 2025-03-29 |
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