- Although global demand remains subdued, there has been an
uptick since December's trough, while the trend actually improved
slightly in North America in
April, indicating some economic resilience
- Excess supply chain capacity was also driven by global
organizations' drawdown of their safety stocks, which have fallen
below their historic average for the first time in three
years
- Supply chain pressures in Asia ease as the economic rebound from
China's reopening peters
outs
CLARK,
N.J., May 15, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The GEP
Global Supply Chain Volatility Index — a leading indicator
tracking demand conditions, shortages, transportation costs,
inventories and backlogs — shows that for the first time since June
2020, global supply chain capacity is now underutilized,
indicating a shift to a buyers' market.
Following inventory drawdowns (which are still ongoing) and 10
months of depressed global demand, the GEP Global Supply Chain
Volatility Index fell below zero in April to -0.04, from 0.32 in
March, a striking contrast from the picture a year ago when GEP's
index stood at 4.61, one of the highest levels of volatility in the
20 years of data.
While global demand for raw materials, commodities and
components remains subdued, it is much improved from the trough in
December 2022, indicating some
stability in the face of consistently high interest rates and a
global manufacturing sector under intense pressure.
Lower global input demand is in large part due to companies'
drawdown of their inventories and safety stocks. Reports of
stockpiling items due to price or supply fears are now running
below historic norms, indicating that firms' concerns toward
inflation and supplier delivery times have alleviated.
Commenting on the April data, Volker
Roelofsen, vice president, supply chain consulting, GEP,
said: "After months of companies aggressively destocking, there is
now excess capacity in the world's supply chains, providing buyers
with greater leverage to extract favourable prices and terms for
the second half of 2023 and into 2024. The good news is that
companies' demand for components and raw materials, while subdued,
is holding steady, indicating that central banks are, at least for
now, successfully engineering a measured slowdown."
The key findings from April's data:
- DEMAND: Global demand for raw materials, commodities and
components continues to be subdued, especially in Europe. In North
America, the trend is improving despite high interest
rates.
- INVENTORIES: Inventories fall as companies continue to
address overstocked warehouses. Reports of safety stockpiling are
below their historic average for the first time since the start of
the pandemic in 2020.
- MATERIAL SHORTAGES: Business reports of item shortages
are at their lowest since September
2020. Shortages were particularly low for metals and
chemicals, although poor availability is still ongoing for
semiconductors and electrical items.
- LABOR SHORTAGES: As has been the case since the start of
2023, labor shortages are having little adverse effect on
suppliers, indicating current staffing is adequate to cope with
demand.
- TRANSPORTATION: Global transportation costs remain
stable and anchored around historically normal levels, reflecting
efficiently operating supply chains as pressures on freight have
subsided.
- REGIONAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY: Global supply chain
volatility is falling in Europe
and North America. Suppliers
feeding in Asia are under the
least amount of strain since August
2020 because of China's
fully reopened economy.


For more information, visit www.gep.com/volatility
Note: Full historic data dating back to January 2005 is available for subscription.
Please contact economics@spglobal.com.
ABOUT THE GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX
The
GEP Global Supply Chain Volatility Index is produced by
S&P Global and GEP. It is derived from S&P Global's
PMI™ surveys, sent to companies in over 40 countries,
totaling around 27,000 companies. The headline figure is a weighted
sum of six sub-indices derived from PMI data, PMI Comments Trackers
and PMI Commodity Price & Supply Indicators compiled by S&P
Global.
- A value above 0 indicates that supply chain capacity is being
stretched and supply chain volatility is increasing. The further
above 0, the greater the extent to which capacity is being
stretched.
- A value below 0 indicates that supply chain capacity is being
underutilized, reducing supply chain volatility. The further below
0, the greater the extent to which capacity is being
underutilized.
A Supply Chain Volatility Index is also published at a regional
level for Europe, Asia, North
America and the U.K. For more information about the
methodology, click here.
About GEP
GEP® delivers transformative
supply chain solutions that help global enterprises become more
agile and resilient, operate more efficiently and effectively, gain
competitive advantage, boost profitability and increase shareholder
value. Fresh thinking, innovative products, unrivaled domain
expertise, smart, passionate people — this is how GEP
SOFTWARE™, GEP STRATEGY™ and GEP MANAGED
SERVICES™ together deliver supply chain solutions of
unprecedented scale, power and effectiveness. Our customers are the
world's best companies, including more than 550 Fortune 500 and
Global 2000 industry leaders who rely on GEP to meet ambitious
strategic, financial and operational goals. A leader in multiple
Gartner Magic Quadrants, GEP's cloud-native software and digital
business platforms consistently win awards and recognition from
industry analysts, research firms and media outlets, including
Gartner, Forrester, IDC, ISG, and Spend Matters. GEP is also
regularly ranked a top supply chain consulting and strategy firm,
and a leading managed services provider by ALM, Everest Group,
NelsonHall, IDC, ISG and HFS, among others. Headquartered in
Clark, New Jersey, GEP has offices
and operations centers across Europe, Asia,
Africa and the Americas. To learn
more, visit www.gep.com.
About S&P Global
S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI)
S&P Global provides essential intelligence. We enable
governments, businesses and individuals with the right data,
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Contact
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Derek Creevey
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Joe Hayes
|
Director, Public
Relations
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Senior
Economist
|
GEP
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S&P Global Market
Intelligence
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Phone: +1
732-382-6565
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T:
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Email: derek.creevey@gep.com
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joe.hayes@spglobal.com
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