Agroindustrias e Inversiones
Agroindustrias e Inversiones is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Agroindustrias e Inversiones.
Agroindustrias e Inversiones is a company.
Key people at Agroindustrias e Inversiones.
Key people at Agroindustrias e Inversiones.
Agroindustrias e Inversiones refers to multiple small agroindustrial companies primarily based in Peru (with one in El Salvador), focused on food processing, import/export of agricultural products, and grocery merchant activities rather than a single prominent investment firm or tech startup.[1][2][3][4][5][8] These entities deal in products like green banana chips with salt, coconuts, and related groceries, serving local and potentially international markets through trade, but show minimal turnover (e.g., 0.00 USD million in imports/exports for some from Feb 2023-Jan 2024) and no evident role in the startup ecosystem.[1][4][5]
They solve basic supply chain needs in agroindustry, such as importing raw materials from China and Argentina for processing, but lack reported growth momentum or broad customer bases beyond trade data.[6][7]
Limited public details exist on founding years or founders for most entities, as they appear to be small, privately held operations without prominent backstories.[3] For Agroindustrias E Inversiones Darvigiel E.I.R.L. in Peru, key principal Vicky Rios Macedo is listed, with activity in importing products like green banana chips.[3][4] Others, such as Agroindustrias E Inversiones Los Sauces S.R.L. (Tax ID 20495808352) and San Simon S.A.C. (headquartered in Chiclayo), operate in Piura and related regions without specified origins or pivotal moments.[2][5][10] The El Salvador entity at Ave. Las Palmas focuses on coconuts but provides no historical context.[8] Early traction is inferred from small-scale import shipments (e.g., 5 for Darvigiel from China/Argentina; 2 for Genesis E.I.R.L.).[6][7]
These companies share a focus on agroindustry but differentiate modestly by location, products, and trade activity:
These agroindustrial firms play no discernible role in the tech landscape, as search data reveals zero involvement in technology, startups, software, or digital innovation.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][10] They align with traditional agriculture and food trade trends in Latin America, such as banana/coconut processing amid global supply chain shifts, but face headwinds from low trade volumes and lack market influence. Timing favors regional agro exports due to demand for processed fruits/vegetables, yet they do not shape or ride tech-driven trends like agritech, AI in farming, or startup funding.[4][8]
With sparse data and negligible activity (e.g., zero turnover), these entities face stagnation unless scaling imports or exports; trends like sustainable agro trade or e-commerce platforms could aid growth, but no evidence suggests adaptation.[1][6][7] Influence remains local and minimal, unlikely to evolve without pivots to tech-enabled supply chains—tying back, they represent basic agro players, not ecosystem shapers.