---
name: analyzing-industry-supply-chains
language: en
description: Maps industry supply chain dynamics with upstream/downstream exposure and competitive positioning. Use when analyzing supply chains, assessing industry structure, or evaluating competitive moats.
tags:
  - analysis
  - equity-research
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Equity Research
    - Investment Management
  document_types:
    - Analysis Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Analyzing Industry Supply Chains

## When To Use

- Evaluating a company's positioning within its industry value chain for equity research
- Assessing upstream supplier concentration or downstream customer dependency risk
- Identifying competitive moats derived from supply chain control, vertical integration, or switching costs
- Screening for supply chain vulnerabilities ahead of earnings or during sector disruptions
- Comparing value chain economics across competitors in the same industry

## Inputs To Gather

- **Target company/industry**: Specific company ticker(s) or industry segment (e.g., "semiconductor equipment," "specialty chemicals")
- **Value chain scope**: Full chain (raw materials to end consumer) or focused segment (e.g., Tier 1 suppliers only)
- **Key financial data**: Revenue breakdown by segment/customer, COGS composition, gross margin trends, capex allocation
- **Supplier/customer disclosures**: 10-K supplier concentration language, major customer disclosures (>10% revenue), contract terms where available
- **Competitive set**: 3-5 direct competitors for relative positioning
- **Timeframe**: Historical period for trend analysis (typically 3-5 years) and forward outlook horizon

## Workflow

1. **Map the value chain structure**
   - Identify all major tiers: raw material suppliers, component manufacturers, assemblers/OEMs, distributors, end customers
   - Note which tiers are fragmented vs. consolidated — consolidated tiers hold pricing power
   - Flag vertically integrated players who span multiple tiers

2. **Analyze upstream exposure**
   - Assess supplier concentration: single-source dependencies, geographic clustering, commodity vs. differentiated inputs
   - Evaluate input cost pass-through ability — can the company raise prices when input costs spike?
   - Identify lead times, inventory buffer strategies (JIT vs. safety stock), and substitution options
   - [VERIFY] Current commodity price trends and recent supply disruptions for key inputs

3. **Analyze downstream exposure**
   - Map customer concentration — revenue share of top 5/10 customers
   - Assess channel structure: direct sales vs. distributors vs. retail, and who controls the end relationship
   - Evaluate demand visibility: backlog duration, contract vs. spot mix, order cancellation terms
   - Identify switching costs for customers — technical integration, qualification processes, regulatory lock-in

4. **Assess competitive positioning within the chain**
   - Determine where margin accrues in the value chain and whether the target captures or cedes value
   - Compare gross margins, ROIC, and asset turns across the competitive set at each tier
   - Identify structural advantages: proprietary technology, scale economies, network effects, regulatory barriers
   - Evaluate bargaining power dynamics using Porter's framework — which tiers extract disproportionate value?

5. **Identify risks and disruption vectors**
   - Geopolitical exposure: tariff sensitivity, sanctions risk, reshoring/nearshoring trends [VERIFY]
   - Technology disruption: emerging substitutes, process changes that could disintermediate a tier
   - Regulatory shifts: environmental rules (e.g., CBAM, REACH), trade policy changes, ESG-driven sourcing mandates [VERIFY]
   - Capacity cycle positioning: current utilization rates, announced capacity additions, historical boom/bust patterns

6. **Synthesize investment implications**
   - Rank the target's supply chain resilience vs. peers (strong / adequate / vulnerable)
   - Quantify margin impact scenarios for key supply chain risks (e.g., +20% input cost = X bps margin compression)
   - Identify catalysts: supply normalization, contract renewals, vertical integration moves, competitor exits

## Output

Structure the deliverable as follows:

- **Value Chain Map**: Visual or tabular representation of the industry chain with the target company's position highlighted, tier-by-tier concentration metrics, and margin distribution
- **Upstream Risk Assessment**: Supplier concentration score, input cost sensitivity analysis, geographic and single-source risk flags
- **Downstream Risk Assessment**: Customer concentration metrics, demand visibility indicators, switching cost evaluation
- **Competitive Positioning Matrix**: Comparative table of the target vs. 3-5 peers on key supply chain metrics (vertical integration, margin capture, asset efficiency, bargaining power)
- **Risk/Catalyst Summary**: Ranked list of supply chain risks with probability/impact scoring and near-term catalysts
- **Investment Takeaway**: 2-3 paragraph synthesis of whether supply chain dynamics represent a tailwind, headwind, or neutral factor for the investment thesis

## Quality Checks

- Every supplier/customer concentration claim cites a specific filing or data source — no unsourced assertions
- Margin and ROIC comparisons use consistent time periods and accounting treatment across the competitive set
- Geographic and regulatory risk factors are tagged [VERIFY] where they depend on current policy status
- The analysis distinguishes between structural (durable) and cyclical (temporary) supply chain dynamics
- Quantified scenarios include explicit assumptions (e.g., "assumes 15% tariff on Chinese imports") rather than vague directional language
- Output avoids forward-looking performance guarantees; frames findings as analytical assessments, not investment recommendations
