2025-09-29 Author:IFS China Source:En.Afastener.com Views:440

Fasteners may be small, but their supply chains are tied to steel markets, international trade policies, and global logistics. This makes them highly complex and vulnerable to external shocks.
Three Major Risks in the Supply Chain:
1. Steel Price Fluctuations: Raw materials account for 50–70% of fastener costs. Sudden price swings directly drive up manufacturing costs.
2. Anti-Dumping Duties: The EU, US, and India impose high tariffs on certain Chinese fasteners, pushing sourcing toward Taiwan, Vietnam, Turkey, or domestic suppliers—often with higher costs and longer lead times.
3. Logistics & Port Delays: Global shipping disruptions such as congestion, strikes, or route blockages can cause 2–6 week delays, directly impacting delivery schedules and project progress.
Engineering & Procurement Response:
1. Engineering Perspective: Factor in supply chain uncertainty during the design phase and avoid relying on a single fastener source.
2. Procurement Perspective: Implement diversified and dual-sourcing strategies, balancing cost, compliance, and resilience across suppliers in Europe, Asia, and local markets.
The fragility of fastener supply chains should not be underestimated. Even minor disruptions can trigger cost increases, redesigns, or production shutdowns. Procurement and engineering must work together to build stronger, more resilient supply chain strategies in advance.
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