Entries in Global Sourcing (113)

Commodity Watch: Energy on the wane; softs volatile

Another week, another set of surprising commodity-price movements. While softs - particularly coffee - remain volatile (coffee and sugar reached highs, while cocoa and orange juice fell back), it was in the energy markets that most activity occurred.

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Last week's most popular stories

Were you away last week? Or a bit pressed and didn't have time to keep an eye on developments? Well, fear not - here's a roundup of last week's most popular stories on ProcurementLeaders.com.

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Commodity Watch: supply shortages spark price rises

Through a combination of supply shortages, the expectation of a return to demand normalising and several other prompts, commodity prices have been busting previous highs and putting strain on contracts. A mixture of erratic weather and jittery markets has kept the summer unpredictable and given buyers plenty to think about.

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The Friday Digest: Public vs private and a double-dip threat

Will this week go down in history as the week that the UK public sector finally sorted out its procurement?

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Does it matter what's driving price volatility in soft commodities? 

Posted on Tuesday, July 20 by Registered CommenterSteve Hall in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

For those complaining about price volatility, soft commodities are not a place to be right now. These situations put stress on buying strategies and they don’t show any sign of easing up. Still, for some it’s not just uncertainty driving these erratic prices.

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Greenpeace lands another blow as Carrefour drops Sinar Mas-owned supplier  

French supermarket giant Carrefour is the latest in a line of major retailers and consumer goods manufacturers to drop the Indonesian producer Sinar Mas' APP products on the grounds of poor sustainability practices.

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The iPhone and the rising cost of China

There's an excellent and well-researched article in the New York Times from a day or two ago which looks in some depth at Apple's iPhone 4 supply chain, and the reliance it has on low-margin Chinese suppliers to produce its product at a price point which is attractive enough to consumers.

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Soft commodities hit the heights

Posted on Monday, June 28 by Registered CommenterSteve Hall in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Here we go again – following global markets in recent months has been, at times, similar to watching the football world cup: occasionally unpredictable, rewarding and frustrating by turns and taken extremely seriously. But is there anything here to really worry about for those that hedge sensibly?

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The changing prospect of sourcing from China

Posted on Wednesday, June 23 by Registered CommenterSteve Hall in | Comments4 Comments | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Welcome to the future. iJetpacks are made in Indonesia and parts for hovercars come from Greece. OK, but flippancy aside – China has spent years as a chief topic of concern and intrigue because it has been the low-cost sourcing destination of choice for so many as the influence of globalisation spread through emerging markets. But that could be changing.

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The Big Debate: CPOs will struggle to cope with commodity and currency fluctuations

The global economy, if it is truly on the way to recovery, is at very best a finely balanced place. And for all the positive talk, there’s still the very real question of whether procurement is equipped for what is happening right now in the financial and commodity markets.

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