Huimingjie (慧明捷)
Fast facts
- Year Founded
- 2006
Source: Tianyancha www.tianyancha.com/company/1229929271
- HQ Location
- Shenzhen, Guangdong, China
- Publicly Traded?
- No
- Overseas Operations
- Yes
Customers in Southeast AsiaSource: Huamingjie www.hmjtx.com/
- US Sanctions
- No
- Military Affiliation in China
- Yes
Huimingjie's service offerings overlap with the scope of China's Public Security and Military apparatus, resulting in applications of Huimingjie wireless image transmission system being used in public security, military forces, customs anti-smuggling, civil air defense, urban management, forest fire prevention, television stations, environmental protection, safety supervision and emergency management.Source: Public Security Outfitters www.e110119.com/index.php
Revenue
Valuation
*Valuation was not publicly reported as of November 29, 2021.
Employees
Source: Tianyancha www.tianyancha.com/company/1229929271
Formed in 2006, Shenzhen Huimingjie Technology, or Huimingjie (慧明捷 huìmíngjié) for short, is a drone company specializing in wireless communication and drone video transmission. The company’s 4G private network and high-definition image transmission through drones have been used in fields such as air defense, public security, military, customs security (anti-smuggling), urban management, forest fire prevention, environmental protection, security and emergency services, and others. The company claims to be “widely used in public security systems in multiple provinces,” along with customers in Southeast Asia. Huimingjie currently has more than 200 employees, 50% of which have technical backgrounds.
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- Name
- Ownership
-
- Zhou Xiaoyan
Source: Tianyancha www.tianyancha.com/company/1229929271
- 50.00%
- Zhou Xiaoyan
-
- Liu Shimin
Source: Tianyancha www.tianyancha.com/company/1229929271
- 50.00%
- Liu Shimin
- Zhou Xiaoyan, Supervisor
Source: Tianyancha www.tianyancha.com/company/1229929271
Huimingjie Sanctions
While at this time it appears that this company is not the subject of any U.S. or other global sanctions, it is important to note that Chinese companies tend to have more opaque organizational structures than their Western peers. Chinese companies’ affiliated brands, operating units, and overseas subsidiaries are not always obvious or even identifiable. Given this, a Chinese company may not be the subject of sanctions, but one of its subsidiaries may be, thus making it difficult to accurately ascertain a company’s full sanctions status.