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Supply Chain Disruptions and Corporate Performance
Vinod R. Singhal Scheller College of Business Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, GA, 30332 May 2, 2013 Presented in the MOT Program at Sogang University Seoul, South Korea
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Primary risk factors Survey done by Harris Interactive in 2005.
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Other surveys about supply chain risks
70% of executives indicate that supply chain risks has increased in the past three years (McKinsey 2010) 68% of executives indicate that supply chain risk will increase in the next 5 years (McKinsey 2010) 48% of executives indicate that the frequency of supply chain risk events with negative outcomes have increased in the last three years (Deloitte 2013) 64% of executives claim to have supply chain risk management programs but only 55% think that these are effective (Deloitte 2013)
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Obstacles to addressing risks
Survey done by Harris Interactive in 2005.
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Supply chain risks Supply chain risks causes demand-supply mismatches Supply is less than demand (undersupply or disruptions) Supply is greater than demand (oversupply or excess inventory) Product introduction delays
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Issues examined Effect of disruptions on shareholder value Effect of disruptions on profitability – growth in operating income, sales, and cost
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Consequences of disruptions
Lower Revenues Higher costs Poor asset utilization Excess inventory, inventory write-offs, stockouts Higher cost of capital/borrowing Shareholder lawsuits Management and personnel turnover Loss of reputation and credibility, negative publicity
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Recent product recalls by Toyota
Sample 1100+ announcements of supply chain disruptions (production or shipment delays) from Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones News - Sun Microsystems delays shipments of workstations and servers, Dow Jones News Service, December, 14, 2000. - Sony Sees Shortage of Playstation 2s for Holiday Season”, The Wall Street Journal, September 28, 2000. Hershey will miss earnings estimate by as much as 10% because of problems in delivering order, Wall Street Journal, September 14, 1999. Recent product recalls by Toyota Boeing Dreamliner problems Recent labor strikes in Shenzen, China
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Responsibility for disruptions
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Reasons for disruptions
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Estimating the performance implications
Short-term stock price effects of disruption announcements - the day before and day of the announcement Long-term effects on (typically 3 years) Stock prices Profitability Performance impacts estimated after adjusting for the performance of benchmarks
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Average stock returns on disruption announcements
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Comparison with stock market reaction to other corporate events
Operational events Increase in capital expenditure % Increase in R&D expenditure % Effective TQM implementation % Internal corporate restructuring % Decrease in capital expenditure -1.8% Plant closing % Automotive recalls (US) % Automotive recalls (Japanese) Marketing events Change in firm name % Brand leveraging % Celebrity endorsement % New product introduction % Affirmative action awards % Information technology events IT Investments % IT problems % Financial events Stock splits % Open market share repurchase 3.5% Proxy contest % Increasing financial leverage % Decreasing financial leverage % Seasoned equity offerings %
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Average stock returns over different intervals
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Average stock returns over three years
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Broader perspectives S&P 500 has returned about 12% annually over the last 15 years Major disruptions are associated with 35% underperformance in stock returns One major disruption every 10 years – average return of 9%
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Profitability impacts in the year before the disruption
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Profitability impacts in the year before the disruption
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Profitability impacts in the year after the disruption
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Profitability impacts in the 2nd year after the disruption
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Summary Disruptions cause significant destruction in corporate performance It does not matter who or what caused the disruption – you still pay Small firms suffer more from disruptions Firms do not quickly recover from disruptions
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Are supply chains more prone to disruptions today?
Globalization of supply chains Increased reliance on outsourcing and partnerships Single sourcing Over-concentration of operations Little slack in the supply chain – focus on efficiency Tightly coupled Competition
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Why enough attention is not paid to the possibility of disruptions?
Consequences are not known Low frequency events Resource shortages Requires cross-functional effort Short tenure of managers You don’t get credit for fixing problems that never happened You have not experienced one
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Summary Can you afford the occurrence of a major supply chain risk event? Supply chain risk management is like buying insurance - Insurance is often most worth having when it seems least necessary. Insurance is often hard to cost justify. What is the easiest way to create shareholder value or make money? Stop losing it!
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