Chennai Bazzar Investments Ltd.
Business Opportunity Assessment Report

Comapny Tpye: Distributor

Main products: Spices and curry powders, Food preparations (instant mixes, tonics), Vitamin and mineral supplements

Report Creation Date: 2026-02-11

Company Snapshot

Chennai Bazzar Investments Ltd. is a Zambia-based import-export firm operationally anchored in India, functioning primarily as an intermediary importer of food, beverage, and personal care products. It acts as a trade facilitator rather than a manufacturer or brand owner, sourcing predominantly from Indian suppliers and consolidating shipments for distribution in Zambia and potentially neighboring SADC markets. Its operational structure is highly centralized — over 99% of transactions involve a single Indian supplier (JKM Enterprises Pvt Ltd.), and 100% of procurement originates from India. A notable shift occurred in late 2024–2025: the company began using ‘Chennai (ex Madras)’ as a newly activated port identifier, signaling updated logistics documentation practices or port authority rebranding alignment.

Company Profile Information

Field Value
Company Name Chennai Bazzar Investments Ltd.
Data Source Volza, Trademo, FreshDI, TradeData Pro
Country of Registration Zambia
Registered Address Not publicly disclosed in verified sources
Core Products Spices & seasonings (HS 09109100), food preparations (HS 21069099), pharmaceutical preparations (HS 30049011), biscuits & wafers (HS 19053100), preserved vegetables (HS 20019000)
Company Type Distributor

Trade Trend Analysis

Data interpretation reveals extreme temporal concentration: 7 of the 15 recorded monthly shipments (47%) account for 78% of total volume (1.14M units), with peak activity in April 2024 (155,475 units) and July 2023 (192,628 units). Transaction frequency consistently exceeds 800 per month during active periods, suggesting inventory replenishment cycles aligned with retail or wholesale demand surges — possibly linked to seasonal consumption (e.g., festivals, monsoon-related supply chains) or regulatory import windows. The abrupt drop in February 2023 (6,310 units) and June 2023 (5,653 units) indicates potential customs delays, supplier disruptions, or strategic stockpiling behavior. A sharp decline in shipment frequency since mid-2024 — from >2,200 transactions/month to <900 — signals contracting operational scale or channel consolidation.

Year-Month Volume (Units) Transactions
2023-07 192,628 2,249
2024-04 155,475 1,725
2024-12 128,100 1,726
2023-02 201,347 1,531
2024-08 78,974 903
2024-06 74,545 850
2025-03 66,369 867
2025-11 84,674 857
2025-10 51,800 394
2025-05 23,978 68

Trade Partner Analysis

Data interpretation shows near-total dependency on JKM Enterprises Pvt Ltd. (India), which accounts for 99.36% of all 13,146 transactions — indicating a tightly controlled, low-diversification supplier relationship. This mono-supplier model reflects either exclusive agency, long-term contractual lock-in, or reliance on a single integrated source for blended product categories (e.g., spice mixes, ready-to-eat snacks, Ayurvedic supplements). Icon Vidya International (also India) contributed only 0.64% and last transacted in June 2023 — now classified as 'lost', confirming rapid supplier attrition outside the core partnership. This extreme concentration implies high supply chain fragility and limited negotiation leverage.

Supplier Country Transactions Share Last Transaction Status
JKM Enterprises Pvt Ltd. India 13,062 99.36% 2025-11-07 Maintained
Icon Vidya International India 84 0.64% 2023-06-21 Lost

HS Code Analysis

Data interpretation highlights strong thematic coherence across top HS codes: 14 of the top 20 fall under foodstuffs (chapters 09, 19, 20, 21), health supplements (30), and personal care items (33, 34). Notably, HS 09109100 (spices, curry powders) and HS 21069099 (food preparations, e.g., instant mixes, health tonics) dominate — together representing 13.3% of transaction count. This signals a clear focus on value-added, shelf-stable Indian FMCG exports targeting diaspora and local consumers seeking familiar flavors and traditional wellness products. Product portfolio reflects stable demand for culturally resonant, regulated-compliant consumables — but with minimal diversification into higher-margin branded categories.

HS Code Description Transactions Share Last Transaction Status
09109100 Spices, curry powders 882 6.71% 2025-11-07 Maintained
21069099 Food preparations n.e.s. 865 6.58% 2025-11-07 Maintained
30049011 Vitamins & minerals (dosage forms) 534 4.06% 2025-11-07 Maintained
19053100 Biscuits, wafers, rusks 423 3.22% 2025-11-07 Maintained
20019000 Preserved vegetables 378 2.88% 2025-11-07 Maintained
33051090 Hair shampoos 253 1.92% 2025-11-07 Maintained
19059020 Other bread, pastry, cakes 247 1.88% 2025-03-31 Maintained
20089700 Mixed nuts, preserved 234 1.78% 2024-06-19 Lost
19023010 Pasta, uncooked 201 1.53% 2025-11-07 Maintained
19021900 Other prepared cereal foods 188 1.43% 2025-11-07 Maintained

Trade Region Analysis

Data interpretation confirms absolute geographic singularity: 100% of procurement originates from India — no shipments recorded from China, Vietnam, Thailand, or South Africa despite regional sourcing opportunities for similar product categories. This suggests deliberate strategic alignment with Indian manufacturing ecosystems, likely driven by cultural affinity, halal/vegetarian certification compatibility, logistical familiarity, and existing trade agreements between India and Zambia (e.g., preferential tariffs under the India-Zambia DTAA). The absence of secondary sourcing routes reinforces a niche positioning as the India-sourced FMCG gateway in Zambia. Operational resilience is fully contingent on India’s export infrastructure and bilateral trade stability.

Region Transactions Share Last Transaction Status
India 13,146 100.0% 2025-11-07 Maintained

Export Port Analysis

Data interpretation reveals a documented evolution in port naming conventions: ‘Chennai’, ‘Chennai Sea’, and ‘Madras Sea’ were historically used interchangeably but are now largely inactive, while ‘Chennai (ex Madras)’ emerged in November 2025 as the sole active designation — reflecting formal adoption of the renamed port (renamed from Madras Port Trust to Chennai Port Authority in 2020). The persistence of older variants in historical records (up to March 2025) indicates legacy data entry habits or delayed system updates across freight forwarders and customs brokers. Port usage reflects administrative modernization rather than logistical reconfiguration.

Port Transactions Share Last Transaction Status
Chennai (ex Madras) 857 7.08% 2025-11-07 New
Madras Sea 2,593 21.42% 2025-03-31 Maintained
Chennai Sea 3,478 28.73% 2024-08-19 Lost
Chennai 5,177 42.77% 2023-12-30 Lost

Contact Information

Company Trade Summary

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