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By April 26, 2021 With more than 40 years of experience distributing fresh produce on the East Coast, Exp Group LLC continues to grow its network of production, importation and distribution of tropical fruits and vegetables from both Central and South America. It has also implemented a robust food-safety program from domestic and foreign farms up to its warehouse. “We are growing,” said Anthony Serafino, executive vice president for the North Bergen, NJ-based company. “It’s been a strange year because of the uncertainty of the coronavirus pandemic. We’ve been on a good trajectory for growth, so pandemic or not, we were lucky enough to have been allowed to operate being an essential business.” ....
Tropical produce seeing strong sales theproducenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theproducenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By February 28, 2021 NORTH BERGEN, NJ Anthony Serafino breezed through his company’s busy warehouse on a Monday morning in January, effortlessly shifting gears between speaking about EXP Group’s bustling business and directing workers who were busy building out an 8,600-square-foot expansion to the facility. “This expansion will bring us to 62,000 square feet of warehouse space, and we just recently added 2,400 square feet of office space, so we are poised for growth,” he said. EXP Group is a leading importer of Latin and tropical items, which it distributes throughout the tri-state area and beyond from its warehouse facility, here. ....
Regional shifts for banana supplies in North America Supplies of bananas in North America are currently moving “like a chess game.” So says Anthony Serafino of Exp Group, LLC based in North Bergen, NJ. He notes that following the hurricanes that hit Central America in 2020 Hurricane Eta in early November and then Hurricane Iota two weeks later there’d been warnings from multinational banana suppliers that pricing would be going up on the fruit and supplies would be scarce. “But we’re not seeing that right now. There’s not the scarcity of banana supply I thought there would be,” says Serafino. However, to make that happen, supplies to regional markets are shifting. ....