Risk-control practices are often carried out by the finance function of a corporation without much input from other functional areas and lack of analysis on their impact of the supply chain and operational decisions. This book aims to bridge the gap in the literature by providing an unified approach to integrated risk management in finance and operations by identifying potential sources of risk to risk-control practices in supply chain and operational decisions. Current challenges in practice are discussed from a managerial and business research perspective A comprehensive, one-stop…mehr
Risk-control practices are often carried out by the finance function of a corporation without much input from other functional areas and lack of analysis on their impact of the supply chain and operational decisions. This book aims to bridge the gap in the literature by providing an unified approach to integrated risk management in finance and operations by identifying potential sources of risk to risk-control practices in supply chain and operational decisions. Current challenges in practice are discussed from a managerial and business research perspectiveA comprehensive, one-stop reference for cutting-edge research in integrated risk management, modern applications, and best practices In the field of business, the ever-growing dependency on global supply chains has created new challenges that traditional risk management must be equipped to handle. Handbook of Integrated Risk Management in Global Supply Chains uses a multi-disciplinary approach to present an effective way to manage complex, diverse, and interconnected global supply chain risks. Contributions from leading academics and researchers provide an action-based framework that captures real issues, implementation challenges, and concepts emerging from industry studies.The handbook is divided into five parts: * Foundations and Overview introduces risk management and discusses the impact of supply chain disruptions on corporate performance * Integrated Risk Management: Operations and Finance Interface explores the joint use of operational and financial hedging of commodity price uncertainties * Supply Chain Finance discusses financing alternatives and the role of financial services in procurement contracts; inventory management and capital structure; and bank financing of inventories * Operational Risk Management Strategies outlines supply risks and challenges in decentralized supply chains, such as competition and misalignment of incentives between buyers and suppliers * Industrial Applications presents examples and case studies that showcase the discussed methodologies Each topic's presentation includes an introduction, key theories, formulas, and applications. Discussions conclude with a summary of the main concepts, a real-world example, and professional insights into common challenges and best practices. Handbook of Integrated Risk Management in Global Supply Chains is an essential reference for academics and practitioners in the areas of supply chain management, global logistics, management science, and industrial engineering who gather, analyze, and draw results from data. The handbook is also a suitable supplement for operations research, risk management, and financial engineering courses at the upper-undergraduate and graduate levels.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
PANOS KOUVELIS, PhD, is Emerson Distinguished Professor of Operations and Manufacturing Management in the Olin Business School of Washington University in St. Louis, where he also serves as Director of the Boeing Center for Technology, Information and Manufacturing. LINGXIU DONG, PhD, is Associate Professor of Operations and Manufacturing Management in the Olin Business School of Washington University in St. Louis. ONUR OYABATLI, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Operations Management in the Lee Kong Chian School of Business at Singapore Management University. RONG LI, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Operations Management in the Lee Kong Chian School of Business at Singapore Management University.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword xiii Preface xv Acknowledgments xxiii Contributors xxv Part ONE Foundations and Overview 1 Integrated Risk Management: A Conceptual Framework with Research Overview and Applications in Practice 3 1.1 Introduction 3 1.2 An Action-Based Framework for Supply Chain Risk Management 4 1.3 Risk Mitigation Strategies 8 1.4 Research Opportunities 10 Reference 12 2 Risk Management and Operational Hedging: An Overview 13 2.1 Introduction 13 2.2 Risk Management: Concept and Process 14 2.3 Identification of Operational Hazards 18 2.4 Risk Assessment and Valuation 22 2.5 Tactical Risk Decisions and Crisis Management 28 2.6 Strategic Risk Mitigation 30 2.7 Four Operational Hedging Strategies 33 2.8 Financial Hedging of Operational Risk 36 2.9 Tailored Operational Hedging 42 2.10 Guidelines for Operational Risk Management 47 References 48 3 The Effect of Supply Chain Disruptions on Corporate Performance 51 3.1 Introduction 51 3.2 Sample Performance Metrics and Methodology 53 3.3 The Effect of Supply Chain Disruptions on Corporate Performance 55 3.4 Drivers of Supply Chain Disruptions 63 3.5 What Can Firms Do To Mitigate the Chances of Disruptions? 64 3.6 Summary 72 A. Methodology Used To Estimate Stock Price Performance 73 B. Methodology Used To Estimate Changes in Share Price Volatility 75 C. Methodology Used To Estimate Changes in Profitability 76 References 76 4 Operational Strategies for Managing Supply Chain Disruption Risk 79 4.1 Introduction 79 4.2 Stockpile Inventory 82 4.3 Diversify Supply 86 4.4 Backup Supply 89 4.5 Manage Demand 92 4.6 Strengthen Supply Chain 96 4.7 Conclusions 98 References 100 5 Beyond Risk: Ambiguity in Supply Chains 103 5.1 Introduction to Risk and Ambiguity 103 5.2 Ambiguity in a Single Period Newsvendor Setting 109 5.3 Ambiguity in a Supply Chain Inventory Positioning Setting 113 5.4 Conclusions 120 References 122 Part TWO Integrated Risk Management: Operations and Finance Interface 6 Managing Storable Commodity Risks: Role of Inventories and Financial Hedges 127 6.1 Introduction 127 6.2 Literature Review 132 6.3 Problem Description 133 6.4 Optimal Policy for Single Contract Financial Hedging 137 6.5 Optimal Policy for a Portfolio of Financial Hedges 142 6.6 Role of the Operational and Financial Hedges 143 6.7 Example of Model Application and Results 150 6.8 Managerial Insights and Conclusions 153 References 154 7 Integrated Production and Risk Hedging with Financial Instruments 157 7.1 Introduction 158 7.2 Single Period Models 159 7.3 Multiperiod Models 177 7.4 Conclusion 192 References 193 8 Capacity Expansion As A Contingent Claim: Flexibility And Real Options In Operations 197 8.1 Introduction 198 8.2 A Financial Option Pricing Model: Black Scholes (1973) and Merton (1973) Model 201 8.3 Real Options Valuation (ROV) in Operations 205 8.4 Conclusion 214 References 215 9 Financial Valuation of Supply Chain Contracts 219 9.1 Introduction 220 9.2 Review of Financial Markets Arbitrage and Martingales 223 9.3 A Model for Financial Valuation of Supply Chain Contracts 226 9.4 Dual Formulation 231 9.5 Experimental Study 234 9.6 Conclusion 243 References 243 Part THREE Supply Chain Finance 10 Supply Chain Finance 249 10.1 Introduction 250 10.2 TheModel Setting Common Notation and Assumptions 253 10.3 Bankrupt-Prone Supply Chains under Wholesale Price Contracts 255 10.4 Financing the Bankrupt-Prone Newsvendor with Trade Credit Contracts 272 10.5 Conclusions and Future Research 285 References 286 11 The Role of Financial Services in Procurement Contracts 289 11.1 Introduction 290 11.2 Model Description 294 11.3 Wholesale Contract with a Budget Constraint (wT QT) 298 11.4 Equilibrium Under a Credit Contract (QI wI ?I) 299 11.5 Equilibrium with External Financing (QE wE) 307 11.6 Computational Experiments 310 11.7 Concluding Remarks and Extensions 315 References 324 12 Production/Inventory Management and Capital Structure 327 12.1 Operations and Finance 327 12.2 The Model 329 12.3 Structural Properties of an Optimal Policy 333 12.4 Characterization of the Optimal Policy 337 12.5 Long-Term Decisions on Capital Structure 346 12.6 Extensions and Variations of the Basic Model 354 12.7 Concluding Remarks 357 12.8 Bibliographical Notes 358 References 360 13 Bank Financing of Newsvendor Inventory: Coordinating Loan Schedules 363 13.1 Introduction 364 13.2 The Stackelberg Game 366 13.3 A Numerical Study 370 13.4 Coordinating Loan Schedules 377 13.5 Concluding Remarks 380 References 384 Part FOUR Operational Risk Management Strategies 14 Decentralized Supply Risk Management 389 14.1 Introduction 389 14.2 Literature Taxonomies 394 14.3 Misalignment of Incentives 398 14.4 Competing Suppliers 398 14.5 Competing Manufacturers 408 14.6 Asymmetric Information 413 14.7 Conclusions 419 References 421 15 Using Supplier Portfolios to Manage Demand Risk 425 15.1 Introduction 426 15.2 Literature Review 428 15.3 A Static Model 430 15.4 A Dynamic Model with Progressive Demand Revelation 436 15.5 Conclusions 442 References 443 16 An Opportunity Cost View of Base-Stock Optimality for the Warehouse Problem 447 16.1 Introduction 448 16.2 A Simple Motivating Example 449 16.3 Model 450 16.4 Base-Stock Optimality 452 16.5 Managerial Aspects 457 16.6 Conclusions 460 References 460 Part FIVE Industrial Applications 17 Procurement Risk Management in Beef Supply Chains 465 17.1 Introduction 465 17.2 Literature Review 470 17.3 Model Description 473 17.4 Computational Experiments for the Beef Supply Chain 477 17.5 Discussion 491 References 493 18 Risk Management in Electric Utilities 495 18.1 Introduction 495 18.2 Price Risk 497 18.3 Volume Risk 501 18.4 Other Risk Examples 507 18.5 Summary 511 References 511 19 Supply Chain Risk Management: A Perspective from Practice 515 19.1 Defining Supply Chain Risk Management 516 19.2 Understanding Your Supply Chain 517 19.3 Developing SCRM Capabilities 518 19.4 Process Approach to Supply Chain Risk Management 523 19.5 Case Study: Cisco Responds to the Sichuan Earthquake 527 19.6 The Importance of an International Standard in SCRM 534 19.7 Conclusion 534 20 A Bayesian Framework for Supply Chain Risk Management Using Business Process Standards 537 20.1 Introduction 538 20.2 Related Literature 541 20.3 A Framework for Supply Chain Risk Categorization 543 20.4 Risk Quantification through Bayesian Learning 545 20.5 Case Study: Risk Modeling for a Global Supply Chain 550 20.6 Summary 561 References 562 Index 565
Foreword xiii Preface xv Acknowledgments xxiii Contributors xxv Part ONE Foundations and Overview 1 Integrated Risk Management: A Conceptual Framework with Research Overview and Applications in Practice 3 1.1 Introduction 3 1.2 An Action-Based Framework for Supply Chain Risk Management 4 1.3 Risk Mitigation Strategies 8 1.4 Research Opportunities 10 Reference 12 2 Risk Management and Operational Hedging: An Overview 13 2.1 Introduction 13 2.2 Risk Management: Concept and Process 14 2.3 Identification of Operational Hazards 18 2.4 Risk Assessment and Valuation 22 2.5 Tactical Risk Decisions and Crisis Management 28 2.6 Strategic Risk Mitigation 30 2.7 Four Operational Hedging Strategies 33 2.8 Financial Hedging of Operational Risk 36 2.9 Tailored Operational Hedging 42 2.10 Guidelines for Operational Risk Management 47 References 48 3 The Effect of Supply Chain Disruptions on Corporate Performance 51 3.1 Introduction 51 3.2 Sample Performance Metrics and Methodology 53 3.3 The Effect of Supply Chain Disruptions on Corporate Performance 55 3.4 Drivers of Supply Chain Disruptions 63 3.5 What Can Firms Do To Mitigate the Chances of Disruptions? 64 3.6 Summary 72 A. Methodology Used To Estimate Stock Price Performance 73 B. Methodology Used To Estimate Changes in Share Price Volatility 75 C. Methodology Used To Estimate Changes in Profitability 76 References 76 4 Operational Strategies for Managing Supply Chain Disruption Risk 79 4.1 Introduction 79 4.2 Stockpile Inventory 82 4.3 Diversify Supply 86 4.4 Backup Supply 89 4.5 Manage Demand 92 4.6 Strengthen Supply Chain 96 4.7 Conclusions 98 References 100 5 Beyond Risk: Ambiguity in Supply Chains 103 5.1 Introduction to Risk and Ambiguity 103 5.2 Ambiguity in a Single Period Newsvendor Setting 109 5.3 Ambiguity in a Supply Chain Inventory Positioning Setting 113 5.4 Conclusions 120 References 122 Part TWO Integrated Risk Management: Operations and Finance Interface 6 Managing Storable Commodity Risks: Role of Inventories and Financial Hedges 127 6.1 Introduction 127 6.2 Literature Review 132 6.3 Problem Description 133 6.4 Optimal Policy for Single Contract Financial Hedging 137 6.5 Optimal Policy for a Portfolio of Financial Hedges 142 6.6 Role of the Operational and Financial Hedges 143 6.7 Example of Model Application and Results 150 6.8 Managerial Insights and Conclusions 153 References 154 7 Integrated Production and Risk Hedging with Financial Instruments 157 7.1 Introduction 158 7.2 Single Period Models 159 7.3 Multiperiod Models 177 7.4 Conclusion 192 References 193 8 Capacity Expansion As A Contingent Claim: Flexibility And Real Options In Operations 197 8.1 Introduction 198 8.2 A Financial Option Pricing Model: Black Scholes (1973) and Merton (1973) Model 201 8.3 Real Options Valuation (ROV) in Operations 205 8.4 Conclusion 214 References 215 9 Financial Valuation of Supply Chain Contracts 219 9.1 Introduction 220 9.2 Review of Financial Markets Arbitrage and Martingales 223 9.3 A Model for Financial Valuation of Supply Chain Contracts 226 9.4 Dual Formulation 231 9.5 Experimental Study 234 9.6 Conclusion 243 References 243 Part THREE Supply Chain Finance 10 Supply Chain Finance 249 10.1 Introduction 250 10.2 TheModel Setting Common Notation and Assumptions 253 10.3 Bankrupt-Prone Supply Chains under Wholesale Price Contracts 255 10.4 Financing the Bankrupt-Prone Newsvendor with Trade Credit Contracts 272 10.5 Conclusions and Future Research 285 References 286 11 The Role of Financial Services in Procurement Contracts 289 11.1 Introduction 290 11.2 Model Description 294 11.3 Wholesale Contract with a Budget Constraint (wT QT) 298 11.4 Equilibrium Under a Credit Contract (QI wI ?I) 299 11.5 Equilibrium with External Financing (QE wE) 307 11.6 Computational Experiments 310 11.7 Concluding Remarks and Extensions 315 References 324 12 Production/Inventory Management and Capital Structure 327 12.1 Operations and Finance 327 12.2 The Model 329 12.3 Structural Properties of an Optimal Policy 333 12.4 Characterization of the Optimal Policy 337 12.5 Long-Term Decisions on Capital Structure 346 12.6 Extensions and Variations of the Basic Model 354 12.7 Concluding Remarks 357 12.8 Bibliographical Notes 358 References 360 13 Bank Financing of Newsvendor Inventory: Coordinating Loan Schedules 363 13.1 Introduction 364 13.2 The Stackelberg Game 366 13.3 A Numerical Study 370 13.4 Coordinating Loan Schedules 377 13.5 Concluding Remarks 380 References 384 Part FOUR Operational Risk Management Strategies 14 Decentralized Supply Risk Management 389 14.1 Introduction 389 14.2 Literature Taxonomies 394 14.3 Misalignment of Incentives 398 14.4 Competing Suppliers 398 14.5 Competing Manufacturers 408 14.6 Asymmetric Information 413 14.7 Conclusions 419 References 421 15 Using Supplier Portfolios to Manage Demand Risk 425 15.1 Introduction 426 15.2 Literature Review 428 15.3 A Static Model 430 15.4 A Dynamic Model with Progressive Demand Revelation 436 15.5 Conclusions 442 References 443 16 An Opportunity Cost View of Base-Stock Optimality for the Warehouse Problem 447 16.1 Introduction 448 16.2 A Simple Motivating Example 449 16.3 Model 450 16.4 Base-Stock Optimality 452 16.5 Managerial Aspects 457 16.6 Conclusions 460 References 460 Part FIVE Industrial Applications 17 Procurement Risk Management in Beef Supply Chains 465 17.1 Introduction 465 17.2 Literature Review 470 17.3 Model Description 473 17.4 Computational Experiments for the Beef Supply Chain 477 17.5 Discussion 491 References 493 18 Risk Management in Electric Utilities 495 18.1 Introduction 495 18.2 Price Risk 497 18.3 Volume Risk 501 18.4 Other Risk Examples 507 18.5 Summary 511 References 511 19 Supply Chain Risk Management: A Perspective from Practice 515 19.1 Defining Supply Chain Risk Management 516 19.2 Understanding Your Supply Chain 517 19.3 Developing SCRM Capabilities 518 19.4 Process Approach to Supply Chain Risk Management 523 19.5 Case Study: Cisco Responds to the Sichuan Earthquake 527 19.6 The Importance of an International Standard in SCRM 534 19.7 Conclusion 534 20 A Bayesian Framework for Supply Chain Risk Management Using Business Process Standards 537 20.1 Introduction 538 20.2 Related Literature 541 20.3 A Framework for Supply Chain Risk Categorization 543 20.4 Risk Quantification through Bayesian Learning 545 20.5 Case Study: Risk Modeling for a Global Supply Chain 550 20.6 Summary 561 References 562 Index 565
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