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Landed cost is the total cost of a product once it has “landed” at your door. It includes the original purchase price plus all logistics and import costs. Key components are: product cost, shipping/freight, insurance, customs duties, taxes (like import VAT/GST), and inland transportation to your warehouse. If applicable, it may also include handling fees, broker fees, and any other charges incurred to bring the product from the supplier to your location. Landed cost is important because it represents the true cost of procurement – a supplier’s unit price might be low, but if it’s coming from far away with high shipping and duty, the landed cost could end up higher than a domestic option. Companies use landed cost to compare sourcing options fairly, set appropriate selling prices, and ensure profitability. Good landed cost calculations also help avoid surprises in the supply chain, as all hidden costs are accounted for.

 If you source internationally, you often deal in different currencies (paying suppliers in CNY, EUR, etc., while your revenue might be in USD, for example). Exchange rate fluctuations can make your sourcing costs higher or lower over time. For instance, if your home currency weakens against the supplier’s currency, the effective cost in your terms goes up (you need more of your currency to buy the same amount of theirs). To manage this:

  • Currency Hedging: Use financial tools like forward contracts to lock in exchange rates for future payments. This protects you from adverse moves.
  • Pricing in a stable currency: Sometimes you can negotiate to pay in your local currency (shifting risk to the supplier) or a mutually stable one like USD. Some suppliers might charge a bit more for this convenience, though.
  • Buffer in pricing: Include a currency fluctuation buffer in your cost calculations. If a currency is volatile, maybe account for a few percent swing when setting your selling price or budget.
  • Monitor and Adjust: Keep an eye on currency trends. If a particular currency is consistently getting more expensive, consider sourcing from elsewhere if feasible, or renegotiate pricing with the supplier highlighting the currency impact.
  • Local sourcing or invoicing: In some cases, opening a subsidiary or sourcing through a local office in the supplier’s country can allow you to pay in local currency out of a local account, possibly timing conversions favorably.
    In summary, currency risk is a real cost in global sourcing, and active management (through financial instruments or strategy) is key to avoid eroded margins.

Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) in sourcing is an analysis that goes beyond the unit price or even landed cost, to include all the costs associated with purchasing, using, and maintaining a product or component over its life. In a sourcing context, TCO might include: purchase price, shipping and duties (landed cost components), plus inventory carrying costs (if one source requires you to hold more stock due to long lead times), quality costs (if one supplier’s parts have higher defect rates, the scrap/rework cost is higher), maintenance or service costs (especially for equipment or machinery sourcing), and end-of-life disposal costs. It might even consider the cost of managing the supplier (travel for visits, communication effort) or the impact on production (like downtime costs if a supplier is less reliable). TCO is important because a supplier with a slightly higher unit price might actually be cheaper in TCO if they offer better terms elsewhere (like consignment inventory or higher quality reducing failure costs). It encourages holistic decision-making rather than focusing just on the immediate price.

Supplier prices can change due to various factors: raw material cost fluctuations (e.g., steel, oil, or electronic components becoming more expensive), currency exchange changes, labor cost increases in the supplier’s region, inflation, or changes in order volume (if you order less, you might lose volume discounts). Additionally, new tariffs or taxes can force suppliers to adjust prices. To manage this:

  • Contracts: Where possible, use contracts that fix pricing for a certain period or have clear rules for adjustments (like linking to a metal index for metal parts). This avoids sudden surprises.
  • Cost Transparency: Some buyers engage in open-book costing with suppliers to see the breakdown of costs. This way if raw material prices drop, you can request a reduction, and if they rise, you understand the rationale for any increase.
  • Alternate Sources: Keep alternative suppliers in play. If one supplier hikes prices irrationally, having a second source gives you leverage or a fallback to avoid paying more.
  • Long-term relationships: Building trust with a supplier can help – they may buffer minor cost changes instead of passing every fluctuation to you, especially if they value the partnership.
  • Value engineering: If prices are rising, work together to find cost savings in the product – maybe a design change or material substitution that’s cheaper without affecting functionality.
    Ultimately, maintaining good communication is key. If a supplier faces genuine cost pressures, collaborative problem-solving (like adjusting specs, batch sizes, or logistics) can sometimes offset increases so both parties maintain profitability.
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