Primary ProcureTech Concern: Weakness & Volatility in Emerging Markets / Trade Wars

Emerging markets are your future markets, and often the source of critical raw materials.

Why?

Given that a lot of outsourcing has been redirected to these “low cost” markets over the past two to three decades, any rapid increase in volatility becomes a significant concern, especially if the markets are not strong enough to weather the storm. A major event could wipe out an entire subset of the supply base literally overnight, greatly increasing supply shortages and increasing the market complexity. Or at least make it unsustainable, such as a 145% tariff on China which is the source of over $500 Billion dollars in imports into the USA.

Impact Potential

The impact of a “low cost” market becoming unavailable, or at least unsustainable, is moderate to severe, especially if all of your outsourced eggs are in the same country basket. One lesson that some companies haven’t learned yet is that dual sourcing is not reducing risk if the two sources of supply are in the same country (or the same small geographic region — because if you have two factories located 100 miles from each other on two sides of a border, guess what, one natural disaster can wipe them both out).

If your primary source of affordable supply is wiped out overnight, it could take months to identify a new source of supply and quarters to secure the supply and get your supply chain flowing properly.

Major Challenges/Risks

Foreign Market Predictions
It’s hard to predict what’s going to happen in a foreign market that you aren’t in everyday. You can follow economist predictions, follow currency trends, try to get a grip on the trade relations between that country and your home country, and so on, but it’s not easy. If you can predict early enough, you can take action. But if an administration, without warning, decides to drop 100%+ tariffs on your source of supply, you’re in trouble.

Alternate Sources of Supply
Sometimes there’s few sources of supply for a given material, part, or product outside of a given country that has a similar total cost of acquisition, especially if you aren’t sourcing at full volume. Identifying alternate sources of supply that you can switch to quickly can be quite a challenge.

New Market Identification
If the emerging market also happens to be one of your primary emerging sales markets, the hit from volatility can be quite significant if the volatility results in rapid inflation, job loss, or both and your sales start to drop rapidly.

Final Words

Given the globalization of today’s supply chains, where a product can depend on materials and parts from dozens of countries, weakness and volatility in emerging markets is a significant concern. And we have yet another (fourth) reason you need an economist!

Primary ProcureTech Concern: Tightening Credit Conditions

The world runs on money, regardless of what form it comes in. Gold, cash, or credit. Credit is particularly important because it helps an organization bridge between cash cycles.

Why?

If economic downturns or inflationary pressures arise quickly, then credit will also tighten.

Impact Potential

If the organization, or its suppliers, needs credit to produce and distribute the goods for sale, the lack of interim credit could lead to reduced inventories and sales and even bankruptcies.

Major Challenges/Risks

Economic Market Prediction:
Predicting whether the economy is going to grow, stay flat, or recess (or depress) is the first challenge, as that’s a leading indicator of credit markets.

Credit Market Prediction:
Based on the projected economic changes, predicting the base and prime rate changes, availability of credit, and the future cost to your organization and your primary suppliers.

Alternative Credit Sources:
If your primary sources are projected to become considerably more expensive or restrict credit access, can you identify alternate sources? Moreover, how much will those cost, how long to establish the relationships, and how reliable will they be?

Alternative Credit Arrangements:
If right now you are just using loans or lines of credit, maybe you need to consider early payment discounts, invoice factoring, or alternative supply chain based credit arrangements.

Final Words

Credit conditions depend heavily on economic conditions, so this is yet another reason you need a good economist.

The Squirrels Have Us Right Where They Want Us!

Over the last couple of years we’ve chronicled multiple instances of squirrel sabotage and how squirrel sabotage is spreading north, the rise of the terror squirrels that have organized their own rigorous training camps, and how they are targeting us when we are at our weakest.

We’ve done this while all the major news sources have not only stayed quiet, but published articles about how cutesy the squirrels are and how a significant number of Americans are now maintaining their sanity by watching squirrel videos.

And, even worse, there is a growing number of Instagram and Tik Tok Influencers who are feeding, befriending, and even housing their own packs! This is EXACTLY where the squirrels want us! That way, when they’re ready to take back the continent, we won’t suspect a thing.

They know their time is close. A few well placed copies of Mein Kampf. Some well timed sabotage during protests and law enforcement operations. Increased stress and angst through well timed power outages. Once a revolution starts, and everyone needs to be armed, their time will be close. Then they just have to wait for mini single shot firearms to start being mass produced (as every lady will want to conceal one or two on her person, just in case), at which point, once there are millions to be stolen, they’ll organize their operation to clean out entire warehouses overnight (since they are small enough to get in and out without anyone knowing).

And we won’t suspect a thing because they’ve been the critters helping to keep us sane with their cutesy acts and subliminal messaging. (The whole point of Squirrel with a Gun was to show us how insane the idea of a squirrel with a full size gun was and ensure we never suspected them of being capable of mass violence. However, tiny derringers come in around 4″ in length and 4″ in height, with the tiniest being about 3.7″ and 2.4″ (like the NAA-22S). Small enough for a squirrel, big enough to take out even the most hardened human (when they sneak up and fire a shot at our temples in close range). And since there are at least as many squirrels as there are of us …

There is NO Infinite Compression – The Latest DeepSeek Paper is BullCr@p!

Every decade or so, some idiots who never studied Huffman coding or Information Theory believe they have cracked the problem of infinite compression, and this linked paper is just the latest example of this lunacy. I really hope this was a joke paper authored by AI because it’s all bullcr@p!

On average, a text token in a LLM should require 20 bits or less (as 17 bits support a 129,000 word vocabulary) while a vision token can be 16,384 bits (based on 1024 dimensional continuous vectors) — because it takes a lot of bits to represent pixelation of a square in a 2-D image! This says you can store about 820 text tokens in the same space it takes to store one vision token. Or, you can store the entire text (lossless) in 48K, versus the 4M it would take to store the 250 vision tokens (using very lossy compression) that are required in the paper. Looks like a LOT of people can’t do basic math if this is being praised as revolutionary!

Moreover, the raw text, which maintains the full context if the tokens are kept in order, is not only fully lossless, but can be compressed using a modified Lempel-Ziv algorithm to take up an average of less than 2 bits per character (and achieve up to an 80% compression rate). Given that the average length of a word in average text is 5 characters, and a space is one character, 2500 words would be 15,000 characters, storable in 30,000 bits or a mere 4K! In other words, this paper is trying to pass off a ONE THOUSAND FOLD increase in space requirements as space saving! Pure lunacy!

In other words, if someone is claiming something too good to be true, it is! Don’t fall for it or the sure to follow claims that DeepSeek OCR is revolutionary because of this. (Since every document is different, you can’t imagine the true loss with a 90% vision token reduction!)

Dangerous Procurement Predictions Part II

As per our first post, if you read my predictions post, you know SI hates predictions posts. It fully despises them because the vast majority of these posts are pure optimistic fantasy and help no one. Why are the posts like this? Because no one wants to hear the sobering reality off of the bat in the new year and the influencers care more about clicks than actually helping you.

But the predictions are not only bad, they’re dangerous. And to make sure you don’t fall for them and make bad decision based on them, we’re going to tackle some of the most dangerous predictions, which include predictions that look innocuous at first glance (like the last prediction on how a big legacy suite will go out of business) but hide the dangerous consequences of what will actually happen if a big suite finds itself in big trouble. Today we tackle the next four, and you can be sure this won’t be the last post in our series. Feeds are still being flooded with prediction posts, and I’m done ignoring the insanity.

4. The jobs market will be tough for the first half of the year, but will start to pick up in Q3 and Q4.

The job market is tied to the economy, and everyone predicts the job market will rebound when the economy picks up. But here’s the thing. Even when the economy picks back up, the job market never does quite as well as the last time. And the economy isn’t going to magically improve half-way through the year. This is the exact same thing we’ve been told the last two years, and it hasn’t happened.

First off, most of the first world economies around the world are flat, borderline recession, or in recession. Secondly, the only thing propping the US economy up right now is AI, and the money circles keeping it afloat as all the AI, Hardware, and Software companies keep moving the same money around investing in each other to keep each other afloat. If the bubble bursts, the US is in trouble, and the economy will quickly flush itself down the toilet. And the job market will go with it.

Considering only the big tech giants who have been hoarding cash for the last few years are in good shape, and everyone else is trying to conserve cash to survive not only the current market but a potential recession, the last thing they are going to do is hire unless absolutely necessary to fill a critical role as a result of a departure. Remember, they’ve spent the last two years using AI as an excuse to lay people off and are always looking for the next excuse to lay people off, not hire them!

Jobs will continue to be super scarce, and only the best will have a chance to land one.

5. We’re in the early stages of a broader pushback (against unnecessary upgrades or technology investments).

A few companies smartening up and saying no to forced big provider upgrades, eight (8) figure consultancy projects, and big Gen-AI investments is not pushback. There have always been a few leaders who have broken away from the pack, did the math, and made the right decisions, but the pack is still charging ahead on Gen-AI. Every big software shop except IBM (who hired a CEO who can actually do math) has invested heavily in Gen-AI, which still loses four dollars for every dollar of revenue, despite any hopes of a real return in the near future and a 94% failure rate.

Let’s face reality. I warned this space about The Vendor In Black nineteen years ago and how he always Comes Back sixteen years ago, no one took heed then, and no one is taking heed now. The business model of the enterprise software space, which has not changed for the two decades I’ve been covering it, is to solve the problem created by the old sh!t by selling the customers the new sh!t that comes with new problems so they can sell even newer sh!t in three years to fix those (and so on). Same old story. Only the vendor names change.

6. We Won’t Buy Things; We’ll Orchestrate Ecosystems.

This prediction likely came straight from the A.S.S.H.O.L.E. and anyone who repeats it should be ashamed of themselves. There are no AI Employees. Claims to the contrary are false and anyone making those demeaning and degrading claims is simply dehumanizing you. And, as we have clearly explained, you definitely don’t want agentic buying because it will happily spend your money not only on stuff you don’t need but stuff that doesn’t exist and, if you’re super unlikely, stuff that is highly illegal. You need wood, it will buy up all the Minecraft wood because it’s cheap and call your problem solved. And that’s if you’re lucky. If you’re not, it will fulfill your resin need with an illegal purchase of hash (the drug) on the dark web (which is labelled resin so the poster can claim they never advertised an illegal drug). And so on.

Plus, as we have already noted, most of today’s “orchestration” platforms in Source-to-Pay are really ORCestration platforms and can barely connect a handful of major Source-to-Pay offerings. They’re nothing close to what is needed to orchestrate ecosystems.

7. Boards will Zero in on Supply Chain Security and Supplier Risk shifts from quarterly PowerPoints to continuous “signalops”.

Just like they won’t invest more in cybersecurity, they won’t invest more in supply chain security until they lose a shipment in the tens of millions. After all, they’ve got supply chain insurance, why should they care? Especially since their current security measures have been sufficient up until now.

But here’s the thing. When the economy goes down, jobs go down. And then two things happen. People get desperate and turn to crime. And criminals, when their investments in drugs, alcohol, gambling, prostitution, and other quasi-legal through illegal activities start losing money because unemployed people run out of money to spend on their vices, these criminals get desperate too — and high value theft becomes more attractive. A temporarily unguarded truck here. A container there. An entire warehouse. And so on.

If it’s critical raw materials they can move (like rare earths), in-demand finished electronics they can sell (like iPhones, where a single container will contain at least 20M worth), military equipment or weapon (component)s that are now in demand globally, they’ll take bigger and bigger chances, especially if there are weaknesses in security. It’s not just cyber attacks that are going to increase, it’s physical attacks, supply chains aren’t ready, and companies won’t even stop preparing them until they lose tens of millions, don’t recover it all through insurance, and risk losing their insurance entirely. No one likes the math of risk prevention because, when it works, you don’t see the return. Even though it’s so much cheaper than insurance! And that’s why, in the majority of organizations, nothing will change.