Article ID: | iaor20116539 |
Volume: | 133 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 272 |
End Page Number: | 279 |
Publication Date: | Sep 2011 |
Journal: | International Journal of Production Economics |
Authors: | Kelle Peter, Inderfurth Karl |
Keywords: | supply & supply chains |
Capacity reservation contracts and spot markets are two alternative purchasing practices. We focus on the cost‐effective management of the combined use of these two procurement sources. Due to the variability of the spot market prices and demand uncertainty, the flexibility of combined sourcing can be advantageous. Spot market purchasing is a benefit in case of low spot market prices or insufficient reserved capacity, and the capacity reservation contract is an operational risk hedging for high spot market price incidents. The structure of the optimal combined purchasing policy is complex. In this paper we consider a simple and easy‐to‐implement capacity reservation–base stock policy and compare it to single sourcing options. We examine the joint effect of demand and spot market price uncertainty. Our analysis shows that in the case of large spot market price variability the combined sourcing is superior over spot market sourcing even in the case of low average spot price. The combined sourcing is also superior over long‐term sourcing even in the case of high average spot price if there is large spot market price variability. Analytical and simulation results are presented to show the effect of the different price, cost, and uncertainty parameters on the optimal capacity reservation–base stock policy and on the expected percentage gain over single sourcing.