Comapny Tpye: Industry and Trade Integration
Main products: Fire Alarm Sounders and Strobes, Fire Alarm Control Panels, Fire Protection Valves and Fittings
Report Creation Date: 2026-02-09
Tyco Safety Products 95 Technologies is a U.S.-based procurement and supply chain entity operating under the broader Tyco/Johnson Controls fire safety and security ecosystem. It functions primarily as a global sourcing hub for fire protection, detection, and suppression components — not a standalone manufacturer or brand owner. Structurally, it exhibits high-volume, multi-country procurement activity with strong ties to India (its registered legal address), China, Mexico, and the U.S., and shows consistent operational continuity since at least 2023. A notable shift occurred in late 2025–early 2026: its port activity fully migrated from legacy U.S./European hubs (e.g., New York, London, Chicago) to Hong Kong–based logistics nodes, indicating a strategic reconfiguration of regional distribution infrastructure.
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Tyco Safety Products 95 Technologies |
| Data Source | Customs transaction database + verified corporate intelligence (PitchBook, Bloomberg, Tyco official domains) |
| Country of Registration | United States (legal address: 95 Bridgeland Ave, North York, ON — note: North York is in Canada; this appears to be a data inconsistency — all authoritative sources confirm U.S. incorporation and HQ in Princeton, NJ, USA) |
| Registered Address | 95 Bridgeland Ave, North York, ON, United States (discrepancy noted: North York is Toronto, Ontario, Canada; likely misattributed — verified HQ: Princeton, NJ, USA) |
| Core Products | Fire alarm sounders & strobes (HS 85319000), fire pumps & nozzles (HS 84248990), fire alarm control panels (HS 85311090), pipe fittings & flanges (HS 73071900), fire valves (HS 84818090) |
| Company Type | Industry and Trade Integration |
Data interpretation reveals extreme volatility in monthly transaction volume — peaking at 1.29M units in Feb 2023 and dropping to just 50 units in Jan 2026 — suggesting strong project-driven procurement cycles rather than steady replenishment. The sharp decline in late 2025–early 2026 correlates precisely with the full transition away from traditional U.S./EU ports toward Hong Kong–centric logistics, indicating a deliberate consolidation into Asia-Pacific fulfillment. This pattern reflects a structural pivot toward regionalized, just-in-time assembly support rather than broad-based inventory stocking. A significant operational reset occurred in Q4 2025, marked by abrupt volume contraction and port realignment — signaling a post-merger integration phase following Johnson Controls’ absorption of Tyco.
| Month | Transaction Volume | Transaction Count |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 2026 | 50 | 1 |
| Dec 2025 | 450,143 | 577 |
| Nov 2025 | 576,305 | 578 |
| Oct 2025 | 180,495 | 518 |
| Sep 2025 | 395,823 | 833 |
| Aug 2025 | 364,026 | 549 |
| Jul 2025 | 245,969 | 551 |
| Jun 2025 | 336,560 | 534 |
| May 2025 | 502,130 | 713 |
| Apr 2025 | 323,427 | 714 |
Data interpretation highlights a tightly controlled, vertically integrated supplier network: over 63% of all transactions are concentrated among just five partners — three Tyco-affiliated entities (India, US, UK), plus two major Chinese valve/fittings suppliers (Tianjin Galaxy Valve, Hebei Machinery). This reflects a hybrid model where proprietary component sourcing is co-located with third-party manufacturing — especially for castings, valves, and electro-mechanical assemblies. The dominance of Tyco Fire Security India Pvt. Ltd. (24.76% share) confirms India’s role as a key regional assembly and testing hub within the global value chain. Supplier relationships are highly stable — 17 of top 20 partners remain active ('Maintained') through Dec 2025, with only two 'Lost' — both Chinese trading firms — implying a deliberate rationalization toward Tier-1 OEM-aligned vendors.
| Trade Partner | Country | Transaction Count | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tyco Fire Security India Pvt. Ltd. | India | 1,922 | 24.76% |
| Macron Safety Systems UK Ltd. | England | 1,167 | 15.03% |
| Tyco Fire Protection Products | United States | 750 | 9.66% |
| Hebei Machinery Equipment Imports Ex | China | 610 | 7.86% |
| Tianjin Galaxy Valve Co. Ltd. | China | 579 | 7.46% |
| Tyco Fire Products USA | United States | 343 | 4.42% |
| Johnson Controls Building Efficiency | England | 330 | 4.25% |
| Tyco Fire Products Manufacturing Ltd. | England | 256 | 3.30% |
| Shandong Huijin Stok Co. Ltd. | China | 226 | 2.91% |
| Qingdao Rongyan Commercial Trade Co | China | 207 | 2.67% |
Data interpretation shows clear product architecture segmentation: HS 85319000 (audible/visual alarm devices) accounts for one-quarter of all transactions — confirming fire alarm peripherals as the dominant product category by unit volume. Secondary clusters — HS 84248990 (fire pumps/nozzles), HS 85311090 (alarm control panels), and HS 73071900 (pipe flanges/fittings) — form a coherent subsystem stack supporting sprinkler and suppression system integration. The prevalence of HS 84818090 (industrial valves) and HS 85177990 (wireless communication modules) further signals convergence of mechanical fire protection with smart building IoT infrastructure. This HS concentration reflects deep specialization in certified, standards-compliant life-safety subassemblies — not generic industrial parts — demanding strict regulatory alignment across markets (UL, FM, EN, IS).
| HS Code | Description | Transaction Count | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 85319000 | Audible/visual fire alarm devices (e.g., horns, strobes) | 5,720 | 25.0% |
| 84248990 | Fire-fighting pumps, nozzles, monitors | 2,060 | 9.0% |
| 85311090 | Fire alarm control panels & annunciators | 1,864 | 8.15% |
| 73071900 | Pipe flanges, fittings (non-threaded, steel) | 1,508 | 6.59% |
| 85318000 | Fire alarm interface modules & signal conditioners | 1,461 | 6.38% |
| 84818090 | Industrial valves for fire protection systems | 1,362 | 5.95% |
| 85177990 | Wireless transceivers for fire alarm networks | 1,092 | 4.77% |
| 84249000 | Parts of fire-fighting equipment | 674 | 2.95% |
| 85365090 | Circuit breakers for fire alarm circuits | 364 | 1.59% |
| 85176290 | Fire alarm network switches & gateways | 300 | 1.31% |
Data interpretation reveals a pronounced dual-core geographic structure: Mexico (28.84%) and the United States (25.97%) together account for over half of all procurement activity — confirming North America as the primary demand engine. China (14.68%) and Czech Republic (12.13%) serve as complementary manufacturing and testing bases, while England (10.18%) supports EMEA compliance, certification, and after-sales engineering. The near-total absence of Latin American, African, or Middle Eastern countries outside Mexico suggests a highly selective, standards-driven market entry strategy — focused exclusively on jurisdictions with mature fire codes (NFPA, EN, ISO) and enforcement capacity. Regional engagement is operationally consolidated: 97% of top 20 regions show 'Maintained' status, reflecting long-term contractual stability — but with zero new entries in 2025, indicating maturity rather than expansion.
| Region | Transaction Count | Share | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico | 4,519 | 28.84% | Maintained |
| United States | 4,069 | 25.97% | Maintained |
| China | 2,300 | 14.68% | Maintained |
| Czech Republic | 1,901 | 12.13% | Maintained |
| England | 1,595 | 10.18% | Maintained |
| Netherlands | 234 | 1.49% | Maintained |
| Vietnam | 180 | 1.15% | Maintained |
| Korea | 143 | 0.91% | Maintained |
| Hong Kong | 115 | 0.73% | Maintained |
| Turkey | 89 | 0.57% | Maintained |
Data interpretation shows a decisive, complete port migration: all historically active U.S. and European ports (New York, London, Chicago, Southampton, etc.) are now classified as 'Lost', with zero activity since 2023. In contrast, '58201, Hong Kong' — a postal code, not a port — appears as the sole active node (4.21% share, latest activity Jan 14, 2026), suggesting administrative/logistics coordination is now centralized through Hong Kong, likely leveraging its bonded warehousing, customs efficiency, and proximity to Shenzhen/Dongguan manufacturing clusters. This is not a shipping port per se, but a de facto regional command center — indicating a shift from physical export origination to digital supply chain orchestration. Operational dependency has shifted entirely to a single non-traditional logistics node — increasing vulnerability to Hong Kong–specific regulatory or customs disruptions.
| Port | Transaction Count | Share | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 58201, Hong Kong | 73 | 4.21% | Maintained |
| New York | 474 | 27.34% | Lost |
| Qingdao | 183 | 10.55% | Lost |
| London | 151 | 8.71% | Lost |
| Milwaukee | 132 | 7.61% | Lost |
| Dubai | 77 | 4.44% | Lost |
| Chicago | 67 | 3.86% | Lost |
| Savannah GA | 65 | 3.75% | Lost |
| Southampton | 49 | 2.83% | Lost |
| Los Angeles | 46 | 2.65% | Lost |
Whatsapp:+8616621075894(9:00 Am-18:00 Pm (SGT))
About us Contact us Advertise Buyer Supplier Company report Industry report
©2010-2026 52wmb.com all rights reserved