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BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

Business

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX
Business

Business

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

2026-07-13 20:27 Last Updated At:20:55

  • Manufacturers' reports of supply shortages among their highest since late 2022, signaling supply-chain bottlenecks will continue into at least the third quarter
  • Businesses continued building buffer inventories, driving another month of strong demand for raw materials, commodities and intermediate goods
  • Demand stayed strong in North America and Asia, but European manufacturers retrenched in June

CLARK, N.J., July 13, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- GEP Global Supply Chain Volatility Index — a leading indicator of supply-chain conditions based on a monthly survey of 27,000 businesses — showed global supply chain pressures remained elevated in June despite falling oil prices and lower transportation costs, reflecting uncertainty surrounding the US-Iran ceasefire.

Reports from manufacturers of backlogs rising due to shortages of critical inputs were their highest since late 2022. The data suggests supply-chain bottlenecks are likely to persist into at least the third quarter as businesses wait for materials needed to complete customer orders.

To guard against further disruption, manufacturers continued building buffer inventories in June. Reports of safety stockpiling increased again and remained at their highest level since January 2023.

Demand for raw materials, commodities and intermediate goods remained strong across North America and Asia, reinforcing expectations that supply-chain activity will stay elevated in the coming months as inventories are replenished and existing orders are fulfilled. In contrast, input demand weakened across Europe.

"The rise in stockpiling and persistent order backlogs point to one clear conclusion: businesses still don't trust the global trading environment to remain stable," said John Piatek, vice president, consulting, GEP. "Despite lower oil prices and easing transportation costs, companies continue buying ahead because they expect further disruption. While this is encouraging for the global economy in the near term, it also shows manufacturers remain very cautious and are planning for more disruption in international trade."

 

Interpreting the data:
Index > 0, supply chain capacity is being stretched. The further above 0, the more stretched supply chains are.
Index < 0, supply chain capacity is being underutilized. The further below 0, the more underutilized supply chains are.

JUNE 2026 REGIONAL KEY FINDINGS

  • ASIA: Index fell to 1.95, from 2.96, its lowest level since March. Easing transport cost inflation was a key factor behind the index decline in June.
  • NORTH AMERICA: Index fell to 1.17, from 1.69, also a three-month low. North American goods producers raised their purchasing activity sharply, however, in response to item shortages and rising backlogs.
  • EUROPE: Index fell to 1.13, from 1.43. Factories in Europe reduced buying volumes to the greatest degree since the outbreak of the Middle East war, although data shows strong inventory growth.
  • U.K.: Index fell to 1.05, from 1.34, its lowest level since April as U.K. manufacturers retrench.

JUNE 2026 KEY FINDINGS

  • DEMAND: Purchasing of raw materials, commodities and intermediate goods required by manufacturers to produce remained strong in June. North America and Asia were the principal drivers of this strength as European factories retrenched. In the US, input buying rose at its fastest rate since April 2022. Japan, China and Vietnam were the Asian markets which saw accelerated purchasing expansions.
  • INVENTORIES: Reports of stockpiled materials rising due to price or supply concerns rose once again in June and were the highest since January 2023, signalling a sustained uplift since the Middle East war began. The data suggest that procurement managers around the globe are holding surpluses to protect against shortages and inflation.
  • MATERIAL SHORTAGES: The items in short supply indicator decreased in June, indicating some dissipation of shortages across the globe. That said, supply issues remained high by historical standards, with the underlying index recording well above its long-term average. Notably, backlogs of work have risen sharply due to inadequate item availability.
  • LABOR SHORTAGES: Manufacturing workforces are not inhibiting capacity, as reports of backlogs rising due to labor shortages were aligned with historically average levels.
  • TRANSPORTATION: With June seeing a sharp decline in global oil prices, the transportation cost indicator subsequently fell. However, excluding April and May, transportation costs were their greatest since June 2022 and still high by historical standards.

For more information, visit www.gep.com/volatility.

Note: Full historical data dating back to January 2005 is available for subscription. Please contact economics@spglobal.com.

The next release of the GEP Global Supply Chain Volatility Index will be 8 a.m. ET, Aug. 12, 2026.

About the GEP Global Supply Chain Volatility Index

The GEP Global Supply Chain Volatility Index is produced by S&P Global and GEP. It is derived from S&P Global's PMI® surveys, sent to companies in over 40 countries, totaling around 27,000 companies. The headline figure is a weighted sum of six sub-indices derived from PMI data, PMI Comments Trackers and PMI Commodity Price & Supply Indicators compiled by S&P Global.

  • A value above 0 indicates that supply chain capacity is being stretched and supply chain volatility is increasing. The further above 0, the greater the extent to which capacity is being stretched.
  • A value below 0 indicates that supply chain capacity is being underutilized, reducing supply chain volatility. The further below 0, the greater the extent to which capacity is being underutilized.

A Supply Chain Volatility Index is also published at a regional level for Europe, Asia, North America and the U.K. For more information about the methodology, click here.

About GEP

GEP® delivers AI-native procurement and supply chain solutions that help global enterprises become more agile and resilient, operate more efficiently and effectively, gain competitive advantage, boost profitability and increase shareholder value. Fresh thinking, innovative products, unrivaled domain expertise, smart, passionate people — this is how GEP SOFTWARE™, GEP STRATEGY™ and GEP MANAGED SERVICES™ together deliver procurement and supply chain solutions of unprecedented scale, power and effectiveness. Our customers are the world's best companies, including more than 1,000 Fortune 500 and Global 2000 industry leaders who rely on GEP to meet ambitious strategic, financial and operational goals. A leader in multiple Gartner Magic Quadrants, GEP's cloud-native software and digital business platforms consistently win awards and recognition from industry analysts, research firms and media outlets, including Gartner, Forrester, IDC, ISG, and Spend Matters. GEP is also regularly ranked a top procurement and supply chain consulting and strategy firm, and a leading managed services provider by ALM, Everest Group, NelsonHall, IDC, ISG and HFS, among others. Headquartered in Clark, New Jersey, GEP has offices and operations centers across Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas. To learn more, visit www.gep.com.

Media Contacts

Derek Creevey

Joe Hayes

S&P Global Market Intelligence

Director, Public Relations

Senior Principal Economist

Corporate Communications

GEP

S&P Global Market Intelligence

Email: Press.mi@spglobal.com

Phone: +1 646-276-4579

Phone: +44-1344-328-099

Email: derek.creevey@gep.com

Email: joe.hayes@spglobal.com

Derek Creevey

Joe Hayes

S&P Global Market Intelligence

Director, Public Relations

Senior Principal Economist

Corporate Communications

GEP

S&P Global Market Intelligence

Email: Press.mi@spglobal.com

Phone: +1 646-276-4579

Phone: +44-1344-328-099

Email: derek.creevey@gep.com

Email: joe.hayes@spglobal.com

** This press release is distributed by PR Newswire through automated distribution system, for which the client assumes full responsibility. **

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

BUSINESSES CONTINUE BUILDING BUFFER STOCKS IN ANTICIPATION OF FURTHER DISRUPTION AS SUPPLY SHORTAGES PERSIST: GEP GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN VOLATILITY INDEX

Bybit executive shares vision for regulation, tokenisation and institutional trust at LEAP East 2026

DUBAI, UAE, July 13, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- As digital assets move beyond early adoption and into the portfolios of global financial institutions, the defining question is no longer whether blockchain technology works, but whether institutions can trust the infrastructure behind it.

That was the central message delivered by Yoyee Wang, Global Head of TradFi and Real-World Assets (RWA) at Bybit, during a featured panel discussion at LEAP East 2026, where policymakers, financial institutions and technology leaders explored how trust is becoming the foundation of next-generation financial systems.

Speaking on the panel, "Trust Is the New Infrastructure: Security, Identity, Fraud & Regulation at Scale," Yoyee outlined why regulation, client-first product design and practical real-world applications are becoming the key drivers of institutional adoption.

"Institutional adoption has never been about chasing the highest returns," said Yoyee. "For professional investors, trust begins with capital preservation, regulatory certainty and infrastructure they can rely on. When those foundations are in place, innovation becomes far easier to embrace."

Drawing on Bybit's experience serving institutional clients globally, Yoyee observed that regulation has evolved from being viewed primarily as a compliance obligation into a strategic differentiator.

She noted that regulatory clarity provides confidence for existing clients to deepen their participation in digital assets while also encouraging new institutions to begin exploring the asset class. As more major jurisdictions establish clear frameworks, institutions are increasingly willing to allocate portions of their portfolios to digital assets, expanding participation across the broader ecosystem.

"Trust is built over time," Yoyee explained. "Institutions don't suddenly move significant capital into a new asset class. They start with measured allocations, validate the infrastructure, and gradually increase exposure as confidence grows. That's how every financial market matures."

The discussion also explored the rapid emergence of tokenised real-world assets (RWAs) and the convergence between traditional finance and blockchain-based markets.

According to Yoyee, the industry's role is not to persuade institutions to adopt blockchain, but to ensure the right infrastructure is ready when they decide the time is right.

"At Bybit, we see ourselves as infrastructure builders," Yoyee said. "Our responsibility is to understand what institutional clients are trying to achieve and provide solutions that address those needs while maintaining the standards of security, governance and operational resilience they expect."

Rather than focusing solely on yield opportunities, Yoyee highlighted that many traditional financial institutions prioritise protecting principal while seeking operational efficiencies. This shift is shaping how digital asset platforms design products for institutional investors.

She pointed to tokenised money market funds as one example where blockchain technology can enhance existing financial products by enabling clients holding on-chain assets such as stablecoins to access returns traditionally available in conventional financial markets, while maintaining flexibility over how they allocate capital.

"Technology should expand choice, not replace it," Yoyee said. "Tokenisation gives institutions additional options to manage liquidity and capital more efficiently. Whether they adopt those solutions is ultimately their decision. Our role is to provide secure, trusted access when they're ready."

Throughout the discussion, Yoyee emphasised that successful institutional adoption depends on understanding clients' underlying objectives rather than simply introducing new technology.

As digital assets become increasingly integrated into mainstream finance, she argued that long-term success will belong to platforms capable of combining regulatory excellence, trusted infrastructure and deep collaboration with financial institutions.

#NewFinancialPlatform

//ENDS

About Bybit

Bybit is The New Financial Platform.

We believe every person should have access to every financial opportunity on earth. That's why we're building the first intelligent platform that connects anyone, anywhere to the world's finance.

Trusted by more than 80 million users worldwide, Bybit brings together investing, trading, payments, and wealth-building in a single secure and intelligent ecosystem. Through the combination of AI-powered technology, deep global liquidity, robust security, and transparent operations, Bybit makes global finance more accessible, efficient, and empowering for everyone.

Built for everyone. Powered by intelligence. Open to the world.

Learn more at Bybit.com.

For more details about Bybit, please visit Bybit Press

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Bybit's Yoyee Wang: Trust Will Define the Next Era of Institutional Digital Asset Adoption

Bybit's Yoyee Wang: Trust Will Define the Next Era of Institutional Digital Asset Adoption

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