New Frost & Sullivan study explores how geopolitical disruption and trade fragmentation are accelerating the shift towards resilient, regionally embedded supply chain models.
LONDON, May 21, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Frost & Sullivan has released a new macroeconomic analysis examining how ongoing geopolitical conflicts, trade fragmentation, and accelerating digital transformation are fundamentally reshaping global supply chains through 2027.
Titled Global Supply Chain Transformations Emerging from Geopolitical Flashpoints and Trade Shifts, 2025–2027, the report explores how supply chains are undergoing a structural reset as geopolitical tensions, tariff regimes, industrial policy intervention, and technological disruption increasingly shape how goods are produced, financed, and moved across borders. The study argues that the transition away from globally optimised, cost-led supply chains towards regionally embedded, resilience-focused operating models will continue to accelerate over the next several years.
The research highlights how disruptions ranging from the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russo-Ukrainian war to escalating US tariff measures and the ongoing Middle East conflict have exposed vulnerabilities across maritime chokepoints, trade corridors, and critical industrial ecosystems. Persistent freight volatility, rising insurance premiums, and longer lead times are increasingly becoming structural operating realities rather than temporary disruptions.
“Global supply chains are entering an era where resilience, regional ecosystem depth, and AI-enabled agility increasingly outweigh pure labour-cost optimisation,” said Nikita Pradeep Talnikar, Senior Research Analyst, Economic Analytics, at Frost & Sullivan. “The organisations best positioned to succeed through 2027 will be those capable of recalibrating their operating models around geopolitical resilience, digitally integrated networks, and multi-node manufacturing strategies.”
According to Frost & Sullivan, nearshoring and friendshoring strategies are rapidly replacing single-source and globally centralised supply chain models, while trade access, regulatory alignment, and industrial policy incentives are becoming more influential than labour arbitrage in investment and sourcing decisions. The report additionally highlights the growing importance of multi-factory manufacturing networks, localised compliance structures, and regional supplier ecosystems designed to improve operational resilience and reduce geopolitical exposure.
The study also examines the rise of financial multipolarity and the growing adoption of local-currency settlement mechanisms and alternative payment rails as organisations seek to reduce dependence on US dollar-denominated systems and mitigate sanctions-related risks. At the same time, predictive, interoperable, AI-integrated supply chains are emerging as critical competitive infrastructure, enabling real-time visibility, dynamic rerouting, predictive forecasting, and more agile decision-making across increasingly complex global networks.
The analysis provides detailed perspectives across aerospace and defence, semiconductors, automotive and electric vehicles, pharmaceuticals and medical devices, machinery and equipment, and chemicals, outlining the strategic shifts, operational constraints, and growth opportunities emerging across each industry.
“Supply chain risk has become a structural cost of doing business,” added Talnikar. “Organisations that align with policy shifts, invest in regional ecosystem depth, and accelerate technology integration will be best positioned to sustain competitiveness in an increasingly fragmented and volatile global economy.”
To download your complimentary excerpt, click here.
About Frost & Sullivan
Frost & Sullivan, the Transformational Growth Company, enables clients to accelerate growth and achieve best-in-class positions in growth, innovation, and leadership. The company’s Growth Pipeline as a Service provides the CEO’s Growth Team with transformational strategies and best-practice models to drive the generation, evaluation, and implementation of powerful growth opportunities. For over 60 years, Frost & Sullivan has partnered with investors, corporate leaders, and governments to identify, prioritise, and execute transformational growth strategies.
Contact:
Kristina Menzefricke
Marketing & Communications
Global Customer Experience, Frost & Sullivan
kristina.menzefricke@frost.com