How to confidently forecast costs in food and beverage procurement

Navigate market volatility and protect your margins with data-driven F&B procurement strategies.

Key takeaways:

  • Global market volatility creates unpredictable changes in food and beverage packaging and ingredient sourcing costs.
  • Using siloed procurement data often creates blind spots that will ultimately weaken your negotiation power.
  • Independent market intelligence allows your team to have stronger, fact-based negotiations with your suppliers.
  • Adopting data-driven strategies helps you establish better cost control and supply chain resilience.

Start your next negotiation with confidence—download the free Forecasting with Confidence Playbook to empower your procurement strategy. Download your free copy now.

When geopolitical conflicts disrupt global shipping lanes, the financial shockwaves eventually hit your supply chain. You see it when a sudden energy crisis inflates the cost of the packaging and ingredients that go into your food and beverage (F&B) products.

For procurement leaders in the food and beverage industry, managing these sudden cost increases is a massive challenge. Suppliers quickly issue price hikes and emergency surcharges. Without independent data, you are left guessing whether these increases are justified or if suppliers are using market panic to expand their own margins.

You need a way to separate fact from fiction. By integrating data-driven intelligence designed for the food and beverage industry into your workflow, you can validate supplier claims, protect your budgets and secure your supply chain.

The danger of siloed procurement data

In the face of these massive, multi-regional cost increases, traditional procurement strategies fail. Many F&B companies still operate in silos. The team buying corrugated boxes works separately from the team sourcing vegetable oils, grains or animal fats.

This fragmented approach creates strategic blind spots. If your packaging buyers are fighting energy-driven surcharges on testliner, but they do not see that ingredient costs for wheat are stabilizing, you lose the ability to balance your product margins. You cannot accurately model the financial impact of a new product launch if you are flying blind on future total costs.

To protect the final margin of your consumer goods, you need a unified view. Our F&B procurement intelligence combines forecast data for key packaging materials with core ingredients. This allows you to spot opportunities and risks across your entire supply chain.

Using market data for buyer negotiations

When a supplier hands you a revised contract with a 15% price increase, how do you respond? If you lack independent market intelligence, you have to accept their narrative. You might assume the entire 15% is due to the energy crisis, when in reality, the energy inflation only accounts for 8%, and the supplier is pocketing the rest.

You must move away from reactive buying. Instead, bring objective facts to the table. Using market-reflective data for buyer negotiations completely changes the dynamic of your supplier relationships.

Here is how you can leverage data to negotiate effectively:

1. Validate supplier claims

Before entering a negotiation, use independent price assessments to verify pricing trends. If a supplier cites rising ocean freight and natural gas costs, pull the specific data for their region and packaging grade. If they produce folding boxboard in a coal-reliant region, their energy exposure could be minimal compared to a testliner producer in Europe. Use this data to challenge inflated surcharge requests.

2. Stress-test your sourcing strategy

Don’t rely on static budgets. Use historical data and forward-looking price curves to model different market scenarios. What happens if the cost of a key raw material increases by 20% for the next two quarters? How does that affect your logistics and production costs? Running these simulations allows you to test your budget against realistic market conditions.

3. Anticipate supply disruptions

The best time to handle a price spike is before it happens. Monitor short-term forecasts to identify volatility triggers. If you see early warnings of a maritime chokepoint or an energy infrastructure failure, you can secure volume in advance to avoid impending price increases.

4. Implement pass-through contracts

To avoid arguing over every market fluctuation, consider moving toward “open book” costing. Link your material costs to a trusted, third-party index. If the verified cost of natural gas or recycled fiber goes up, the price goes up. If it drops, you get the savings. This positions independent data as the neutral referee, building trust and speeding up negotiations.

Transform your procurement strategy

Volatility is no longer an exception; it is the baseline for the food and beverage industry. You cannot control geopolitical conflicts or global energy prices, but you can control how your supply chain responds.

By grounding your procurement strategy in independent, forward-looking data, you can build a defensive moat around your profitability. Food and beverage procurement intelligence allows you to stop reacting to the market and start anticipating it.

Equip your team with the insights they need to budget smarter, negotiate better and stay ahead of market dynamics.

Ready to protect your margins and optimize your sourcing? Download our free Forecasting with Confidence Playbook today to learn how data-driven intelligence transforms food and beverage procurement.

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