06/11/2026
66% of business leaders cite business interruption as a top risk. 16% say supply chain disruption and missed project deadlines are their primary concern.
In 2023, a severe drought caused water levels in the Panama Canal to drop, and forced vessels to queue, disrupting just-in-time inventory schedules globally.
In response, some companies are now shortening supply chains and finding manufacturing clusters in tighter regional footprints. Mexico, India, Poland, and Vietnam are leading that shift.
But sourcing strategy is only part of the equation. The risks that are harder to see compound just as fast.
Other components such as cyber threats, require an explicit incident response plan. Political risk requires desktop exercises for worst-case scenarios. And regulatory compliance means following the laws of every country you operate in.
For any business in the supply chain, that means knowing exactly where your coverage responds when a delayed shipment or supplier failure starts affecting customers downstream.
Read the full breakdown with Shively Bros.: https://bit.ly/4uuGpt0