Prices Are Moving — But Suppliers Won’t Commit
April 2026
Asia Agent Pte Ltd
This is not one factory.
We’re seeing it across multiple suppliers, across multiple negotiations, every week.
Same pattern.
- “price depends on timing”
- “quote valid for 24 hours”
- “need deposit to lock”
Same products.
Same factories.
Different behavior.
What’s actually happening
Prices are already moving.
Not always cleanly in the quote.
But clearly in how suppliers behave.
Across multiple POs, we are seeing:
- delayed pricing
- shortened validity
- conditional quotes
- deposits required before commitment
This is not normal negotiation.
It’s a structural shift.
The situation buyers are in
This creates a clear problem:
- no fixed cost
- no planning visibility
- no reliable budgeting
Buyers are being pushed to:
commit before the price is actually secured
Not once.
Consistently.
Why this is happening now
Two forces are hitting at the same time.
1) Real cost pressure
- energy instability
- material volatility
- freight uncertainty
- upstream supply pressure
This is already feeding into supplier costs.
2) Timing
- post-holiday demand cycle starting
- Q4 planning beginning
- suppliers expecting stronger orders
Leverage is shifting back to suppliers.
The energy connection
This is where it becomes real.
Strait of Hormuz risk → oil volatility
That flows directly into:
- plastics
- chemicals
- packaging
- transport
- freight
At the same time:
- metals like copper are rising due to shipping disruptions
- imported inputs become less predictable
Even factories are saying it clearly:
if the situation stabilizes, prices will drop
Which means:
Prices now include uncertainty — not just cost.
What suppliers are actually pricing now
Suppliers are no longer quoting based on current cost.
They are quoting based on expected volatility.
That includes:
- oil-driven materials (plastics, chemicals)
- shipping-affected inputs (copper, components)
- freight uncertainty
- timing risk
So even before costs fully move:
pricing behavior already changes
What suppliers are actually doing
Across different factories, same behavior:
- secure the order first
- keep pricing flexible
- shift uncertainty forward
- avoid locking exposure
They are protecting margin under uncertainty.
What buyers are losing
Control over pricing decisions.
Not supply.
Not access.
Control.
The decision shifts from:
“Is this a good price?”
To:
“Do we commit without knowing the real price?”
Why this is dangerous
Because the structure is one-sided.
- if costs rise → buyer absorbs
- if costs fall → supplier adjusts later
Risk flows in one direction.
Why this is not a supplier issue
This is market-wide.
Across multiple factories, same pattern.
- same upstream pressure
- same cost uncertainty
- same response
Switching suppliers doesn’t remove it.
What strong buyers are doing differently
They don’t accept uncertainty.
They structure it.
1) Force commitment
- fixed quote with real validity (7–14 days)
- clear mechanism for material changes
- no deposit without locked terms
2) Split the risk
- place partial order now
- keep balance flexible
- avoid full exposure at one price point
3) Create competition
- run parallel suppliers
- make it visible
- remove supplier comfort
4) Control timing
- don’t wait blindly
- don’t rush blindly
- use timing only with leverage in hand
In practice
You’re not eliminating uncertainty.
You’re deciding:
how much of it you carry — and how much stays with the supplier.
Asia Agent perspective
This is not just a price increase cycle.
It’s a pricing behavior shift.
Prices are no longer a reflection of cost.
They are a reflection of uncertainty.
And suppliers are deciding how that uncertainty is passed on.
Final thought
Factories didn’t change.
The cost environment did.
And suppliers adapted faster than buyers.
The buyers who structure uncertainty will manage this cycle.
The ones who don’t will carry the risk.
FAQ
1) Are prices already increasing?
Yes — through behavior, not always direct quotes.
2) Why won’t suppliers commit?
Because their cost base is unstable.
3) What changed compared to before?
Suppliers are pricing future risk, not current cost.
4) Why are deposits required now?
To shift risk from supplier to buyer.
5) Is this happening across industries?
Yes, especially in material-heavy products.
6) Can buyers wait instead of committing?
Waiting also carries risk — prices may move further.
7) Does switching suppliers help?
Not significantly — behavior is market-wide.
8) What’s the biggest risk?
Committing without price certainty.
9) What should buyers negotiate?
Pricing structure and risk-sharing.
10) What is the key shift?
From price negotiation to risk control.