In a time of heightened awareness, manufacturers are finding ways to secure their access to the assets they need.
In a time of heightened awareness, manufacturers are finding ways to secure their access to the assets they need.
In the supply chain universe, change is the only constant. Disruption was a cornerstone of the COVID-19 pandemic, and it has only continued since. That’s not to say supply chain disruptions affecting companies today are the same as they were three years ago, though. But as the world evolves, so do the challenges it poses.
When certain sectors experience disruption, others have more stability; nevertheless, the supply chain environment has proven itself cyclical. The manufacturing sector is no exception to this predisposition and as such, functions as a microcosm of this cycle at large.
“Supply chain disruptions continue to crush access to the assets manufacturers need three years on,” said David Normandin, president and CEO of Wintrust Specialty Finance. “The availability of raw materials, the reliance on specialty equipment, and the logistics that come with a robust, multi-stage production journey from source to vendor to manufacturer to customer all bring countless opportunities for disruption that continue today.”
Despite uncertainty that exists at different points of the supply chain, there are steps companies can take to ensure their contingency plans create the least disruption possible. Examining the manufacturing sector’s response and evolution illuminate how.
Put simply, supply chains work until they don’t. Along with the rest of the world, the manufacturing sector discovered that the longer the supply chain, the more easily it can break down.
“As the world came to a halt, a lot of the orders manufacturers were putting in for assets necessary to the function of their business were getting delayed 12 to 18 months,” said Jeff Wolinski, president and CEO of Wintrust Equipment Finance. “They weren’t getting the equipment they needed, which caused a domino effect — they put down payments on equipment at higher interest rates anticipating they’d only pay that interest for a few months’ time, rates skyrocketed, and they found themselves paying more while waiting for the equipment.”
As the value of assets was driven sky-high and the cost to acquire them rose, manufacturers were left in the lurch. In response, they resorted to buying used equipment such as trucks and trailers, Wolinski explained, a tactic that proved costly.
“They were paying extra interest on down payments; they were paying for equipment they thought they’d return over a longer period of time,” Wolinski said. “Then interest rates rose, and it was kind of a perfect storm for all our customers.”
The perfect storm didn’t last, though. Vendors eventually could access the raw materials they needed to build their inventory back and lead times leveled out, but did so just as demand dropped significantly.
“On the other end, we’re seeing values fall significantly for specific assets that you frankly couldn’t get before,” Normandin said. “Companies are now canceling orders because the supply chain has caught up to the point that the price they agreed to buy assets at was 20% higher than what they can buy them for today. That shift is impacting how manufacturers are thinking about the acquisition of assets, especially in the context of current economic conditions.”
Beyond limited flexibility, heightened costs, and being unable to acquire the assets needed to foster business growth, the ramifications of supply chain disruption can be extensive.
“Manufacturers acquire equipment as an investment in their deliverable to customers,” Normandin explained. “When that’s not possible, it means that they can’t fulfill the needs of their customers, or they have to hedge those needs.”
To account for this, manufacturers have begun structuring agreements with customers that explicitly state their ability to deliver products or services is contingent upon their ability to acquire the necessary assets or the price of said assets.
“In business, it’s important that there’s a sense of certainty,” Normandin continued. “Making sure that you can deliver on the expectations you set with your customers is important because it impacts their confidence in your ability to meet their needs and ultimately determines whether they want to do business with you or not.”
It takes very little to disrupt a supply chain. Fortunately, there are tactics that companies can employ to adapt to an ever-changing world ripe with challenges, while minimizing impact in the process.
Despite its ripple effects still being felt, the pandemic’s impact on supply chains wasn’t all negative. Our collective conceptual understanding of supply chains and the role they play in receiving our goods as end-users improved drastically. Of course, this happened by way of exposure to disruption.
“People are much more aware of the supply chain now,” Phillips said. “They understand the risk because they lived it, and they’re taking the necessary steps to reinforce weak links however they can. There are some changes taking hold that are establishing more certainty in supply chain management. It’s creating challenges for some, but it’s certainly creating opportunities for others.”
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