Friday, March 13, 2026
Navigating Capital Scarcity: SAP Solutions for Real-Time Capital Optimization in a Volatile Global Economy
The global economy stands at a precarious crossroads, facing a confluence of structural vulnerabilities not seen in decades. As we move through 2026, the traditional pillars of monetary expansion that sustained growth since the 2008 financial crisis are crumbling. The world is currently grappling with a "polycrisis" characterized by record-high sovereign debt, stagnant productivity, and a devastating energy shock triggered by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz—a maritime chokepoint through which nearly a fifth of the world’s oil consumption passes.
This energy blockade has sent inflationary shockwaves through a system already weakened by the "Tapering" of central bank liquidity. For G7 nations and emerging markets alike, the era of "cheap money" has ended, replaced by a brutal reality of capital scarcity. In this environment, risk management can no longer be a reactive back-office function. To survive a landscape defined by volatile foreign exchange (Forex) markets and collapsing asset valuations, financial institutions must transition toward a real-time, data-driven architecture. The integration of sophisticated platforms like SAP’s Integrated Financial and Risk Architecture (IFRA) is no longer a luxury; it is a strategic imperative for institutional survival.
"In a volatile world, collateral and forex are no longer static safeguards—they are strategic levers." — SAP Risk Management Framework
1. The Historical Echo: From Subprime to the Modern Debt Trap
History suggests we are repeating the errors of the mid-2000s, but on a much larger scale. The Subprime Crisis of 2007 began with minor tremors—slight interest rate hikes and localized housing dips—that were dismissed by policymakers as "contained." Today, we see a similar dismissal of systemic risks despite clear warning signs.
The Liquidity Mirage
Over the past several years, the Bank of England, the Federal Reserve, and the Bank of Japan injected unprecedented liquidity into the global veins. This "wall of money" fueled carry trades, where capital flowed into emerging economies, bloating their external debt. Brazil’s external debt, for instance, surged from $200 billion to over $312 billion in a short window, much of it misallocated into consumption and real estate rather than productive infrastructure.
The Shadow Banking Black Box
Much like the opaque Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) of 2008, the modern financial system is haunted by the explosion of shadow banking, particularly in China. With the Chinese property market in a sustained downturn since 2021, the true scale of hidden liabilities remains a mathematical ghost. This opacity, combined with record-high margin debt—which peaked at $451 billion recently—creates a "tinderbox" effect. A single spark, such as a sustained energy-driven interest rate spike, could trigger a cascade of margin calls and a systemic collapse of collateral values.
"The financial markets are experiencing instability, a predictable outcome as the Federal Reserve begins to taper its quantitative easing program. This withdrawal of liquidity makes risky assets less appealing." — Financial Market Analysis Review
2. The G7 Fragility and the Hormuz Energy Shock
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has acted as a catalyst, exposing the fiscal rot within the world’s leading economies. When energy prices skyrocket, the cost of servicing massive national debts rises in tandem, creating a "doom loop" of deficit spending.
A Portrait of Sovereign Distress
The debt-to-GDP ratios of the G7 are at historic highs, leaving little room for fiscal maneuvering:
United States: With a ratio exceeding 120%, the U.S. faces mounting interest costs that now rival defense spending.
Japan: The outlier at 250%, Japan’s domestic debt holdings provide a thin veil of stability that is being pierced by global inflationary pressures.
Italy and France: Both nations are struggling with ratios between 115% and 140%, facing intense pressure from the Eurozone to implement austerity measures that a slowing economy cannot support.
United Kingdom: Debt levels have reached heights not seen since the post-WWII era, as the "triple whammy" of Brexit, the pandemic, and the energy crisis takes its toll.
This debt burden, coupled with the World Bank’s projection of global growth slowing to a meager 2.3%, signifies the end of the "debt-led" growth model. We are entering an era of Capital Scarcity. In a world where capital is over-consumed by debt servicing and under-generated by weak growth, the financial system must pivot from expansion to optimization.
"Excess debt, at its highest levels in history, is consuming capital at an unprecedented pace. At the same time, weaker economic growth is slowing down the generation of new capital." — Global Economic Prospects Report
3. The Real-Time Imperative: Risk Management as Strategy
In this volatile landscape, risk management must transform. The "Real-Time Imperative" dictates that credit and market risks can no longer be assessed through quarterly reports. They must be managed dynamically, turning collateral and Forex into strategic levers rather than static safeguards.
Dynamic Collateral Management
Collateral is the lifeblood of credit. In a crisis, the value of assets fluctuates wildly. A modern approach requires two distinct phases:
Collateral Mobilization: Utilizing AI to identify eligible assets across the enterprise based on real-time "haircuts" (valuation discounts) and stress behavior.
Continuous Rebalancing: Using automated engines to reallocate collateral as counterparty ratings shift, ensuring that capital is never "trapped" or underutilized.
Proactive Forex Exposure Forecasting
The Hormuz shock has caused extreme currency volatility. For instance, the Turkish Lira and other emerging market currencies have seen devaluations of 30% or more in mere months. Traditional forecasting is insufficient. Businesses require a unified view of sales, procurement, and market sentiment to hedge exposures before volatility erodes profit margins.
"Risk management is no longer a static process. It requires a dynamic, data-driven approach, transforming it from a back-office function to a core strategic capability." — The Real-Time Imperative Strategy
4. The IFRA Solution: Leveraging the SAP Ecosystem
To address the scarcity of capital, institutions need a unified, adaptive infrastructure. The Integrated Financial and Risk Architecture (IFRA), powered by SAP, provides the technological backbone for this transition.
The Data Foundation
The core of this architecture is the SAP Business Data Cloud (BDC) and SAP Financial Services Data Management (FSDM). These tools eliminate data silos by creating a "golden source" of truth.
Centralized Visibility: Ingesting data from disparate global operations to monitor every exposure and asset in real-time.
Intelligent Allocation: AI-driven engines use this data to optimize collateral usage, ensuring that the highest-quality assets are used only when necessary.
Simulation and Stress Testing
Using the power of SAP HANA (in-memory computing), institutions can run complex "what-if" scenarios. What happens to our liquidity if oil hits $150 a barrel? How does a 200-basis-point hike in the Eurozone affect our Risk-Weighted Assets (RWA)? IFRA allows for these simulations to be run in seconds, providing a forward-looking view that traditional systems cannot match.
"The foundation is SAP Business Data Cloud and SAP Financial Services Data Management, which create a unified repository for all collateral assets, exposures, and financial flows." — SAP Financial Services White Paper
5. Strategic Benefits: Turning Risk into Advantage
Integrating collateral and Forex management into a single, proactive framework yields four critical advantages:
Capital Efficiency: By optimizing collateral, banks can reduce their RWA in SAP Bank Analyzer, directly lowering the amount of regulatory capital they must hold.
Profitability: Proactive Forex forecasting reduces the cost of hedging. Furthermore, better data improves the accuracy of IFRS 9 calculations, preventing over-provisioning for losses.
Operational Agility: Automation removes the "human bottleneck" in treasury functions, allowing for rapid pivots during market panics.
Regulatory Readiness: Transparency is "baked in." Audit trails and compliance reporting become automated outputs of the system rather than manual chores.
"By integrating collateral and forex management into a single, proactive framework, institutions gain significant benefits, including the reduction of Risk-Weighted Assets." — IFRA Operational Benefits Guide
6. Operationalizing the Future: A Roadmap
Moving from a legacy system to an IFRA-based model requires a structured approach:
Step 1: Assess & Blueprint: Define how to centralize data from existing Treasury Management Systems (TRM) and Collateral Management Systems (CMS).
Step 2: Deploy Core Modules: Implement subledgers to manage the real-time lifecycle of assets.
Step 3: Integrate AI Analytics: Build Machine Learning models for predictive Forex and liquidity forecasting.
Step 4: Test & Stress: Run scenarios to validate rebalancing and hedging effectiveness under various market conditions.
Step 5: Operationalize: Formalize automated workflows and dashboards for both risk functions.
"Run scenarios to validate rebalancing and hedging effectiveness under various market conditions to ensure regulatory readiness and capital agility." — IFRA Implementation Roadmap
Conclusion
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the subsequent energy shock are not just isolated geopolitical events; they are the "Minsky Moment" for a global economy over-leveraged and starved of growth. The transition from debt expansion to capital optimization is no longer optional—it is a matter of institutional survival.
As we have seen, the echoes of 2007 are loud, but the tools at our disposal in 2026 are far more powerful. By adopting a unified, intelligent architecture like SAP IFRA, financial institutions can navigate the era of capital scarcity. We must move away from "extinguishing fires with gasoline"—stop relying on central bank liquidity and start relying on internal efficiency. In this complex, volatile world, those who can visualize and mobilize their capital in real-time will not only survive the storm but will define the new financial order.
"It is mandatory to transform the financial system from a model predominantly based on debt expansion to one fundamentally built on capital optimization." — Strategic Financial Transformation Manifesto
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I'm always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#SAP #CapitalOptimization #IFRA #RiskManagement #FinancialStability #EnergyShock #StraitOfHormuz #DebtCrisis #FinTech #CapitalScarcity #CapitalOptimization #FerranFrances
Orchestrating Capital Optimization through SAP Characteristics-Based Planning and the Financial Twin Architecture
The Great Compression: Energy Volatility and the Geopolitics of the 100 USD Barrel
The contemporary global economy has entered a structural phase defined by "The Great Compression"—a convergence of energy volatility, maritime chokepoints, and systemic liquidity tightening. This era is no longer characterized by the linear growth patterns of the past but by the simultaneous pressure exerted on both the physical operational layer of the economy and the financial architecture that sustains it. The immediate catalyst for this current systemic shock is the strategic closure of the Strait of Hormuz. As the world’s most vital maritime artery for energy flows, its obstruction has fundamentally decoupled global supply from demand, sending oil prices surging toward the 100 USD per barrel mark.
This surge is not a localized event. It functions as a multi-dimensional pathogen, migrating through the industrial ecosystem with remarkable speed. Energy-intensive sectors, from heavy manufacturing and chemical processing to fertilizer production and metals, face an immediate and brutal escalation in their cost of goods sold (COGS). Logistics networks, already fragile, are witnessing a spike in freight costs that threatens to render many traditional trade routes economically unviable. However, the most profound consequences are not found in the operational balance sheet alone. They manifest in the financial "double squeeze": as inflation accelerates and central banks maintain restrictive monetary policies, corporations face weakening cash generation just as the cost of financing their debt reaches a decadal peak.
"We are moving from an era of global abundance to a reality of localized chokepoints, where the speed of data must exceed the speed of the crisis."
The Pillars of Precision: Redefining AI Intelligence in the Enterprise
In this landscape of high-cost energy and geopolitical friction, the focus of enterprise technology is shifting. While the raw power of large language models and generalized AI captures the public imagination, the "intelligence" required for mission-critical enterprise deployment is not merely a product of algorithms. It is a product of structural precision. As the industry moves from experimental prototypes to the orchestration of global capital, we are realizing that AI can only be as effective as the data architecture it inhabits.
Three concepts have emerged as the silent architects of this new precision: Segmentation, Characteristics-Based Planning (CBP), and the use of Qualifying Attributes. Together, they form the foundation for the Financial Twin, a high-fidelity digital representation of economic reality that enables a seamless, automated, and more resilient global economy. This framework allows an organization to view the world not through blurry generalizations, but through a lens of discrete, actionable data points that mirror the complexity of the physical world.
"The true value of AI does not lie in its ability to mimic human conversation, but in its ability to organize and act upon the world's complexity at a scale humans cannot match."
1. Segmentation: The Vision of Precision in a Multi-Dimensional World
Segmentation is the foundational process of dividing a broad, heterogeneous dataset into smaller, homogeneous subgroups. However, in the context of the Financial Twin, segmentation is far more granular than traditional business categories. It represents a shift from "pixels to logic." Just as semantic segmentation in computer vision allows an autonomous vehicle to distinguish a pedestrian from a sidewalk at the pixel level, financial segmentation allows the SAP Integrated Financial and Risk Architecture (IFRA) to distinguish between different tiers of risk and liquidity in real time.
By embedding segmentation into the foundational digital core, every functional module—from warehouse management to transportation—now speaks a common multi-dimensional language. A shipment of medical-grade pharmaceuticals is no longer just a "product"; it is a segment defined by regulatory compliance, temperature sensitivity, and geopolitical exposure. This allows the AI to apply different logic to different categories, providing the focus required for safety, efficiency, and regulatory compliance in a world where a single shipment’s delay can impact a company’s credit rating.
"The intelligence of an AI system is not just a product of its algorithms, but of the structural precision with which it views the world."
2. Characteristics-Based Planning (CBP): Beyond the Static ID
If segmentation is about grouping, Characteristics-Based Planning (CBP) is about understanding the "DNA" of an object. Traditional systems manage items as unique identifiers (SKUs), but in a world of infinite variety and constant change, managing every possibility as a unique code is impossible. CBP treats objects as collections of dynamic attributes—grade, certification, carbon intensity, and supply risk—rather than fixed IDs.
For the Financial Twin, this is a superpower. It allows financial models to make intelligent decisions about things they have never seen before. If an AI understands the characteristics of a high-risk financial transaction—such as high velocity or an unusual IP address—it can flag fraud even without a pre-coded scenario. In the era of the 100 USD barrel, CBP allows for Active Risk Management, where the system plans the organization’s financial strategy based on the dynamic attributes of its assets, from interest rate sensitivity to the carbon footprint of its supply chain.
"Managing complexity and variety through unique SKUs is inefficient. To evolve, we must transition from static identifiers to a dynamic, attribute-based architecture."
3. The Future of Incompatibilities: Intelligent Logistics
A prime example of this extended segmentation is found in SAP Transportation Management (TM). Traditionally, incompatibilities—rules preventing certain goods from being shipped together—were managed via rigid, manual tables. As segmentation extends across the digital core, these rules become "Attribute-Aware." The Transportation Optimizer no longer looks at material numbers alone; it looks at the Segment and the Qualifying Attributes.
For instance, a segment labeled "Medical Grade" might be automatically flagged as incompatible with a "General Cargo" resource, even if the base material is the same. This logic flows automatically from the sales order to the freight unit via the Business Rule Framework (BRFplus). This ensures that the physical movement of goods is always in compliance with the financial and regulatory constraints of the Financial Twin, protecting the enterprise from the liability risks that accompany maritime disruptions.
"A Financial Twin mirrors the physical state of an asset with a granular, real-time digital representation."
4. Qualifying Attributes: The Basis for Fair Value
The breakthrough in modern AI-driven finance is the realization that the attributes qualifying an asset are the fundamental basis for determining the Fair Value of its Financial Twin. This valuation is not a static number derived from a quarterly spreadsheet; it is a dynamic calculation derived from qualifying attributes captured by SAP Global Track and Trace and Financial Services Data Management (FSDM).
Every physical milestone achieved—a production stage completed, a regulatory approval granted, or a shipment reaching a safe harbor—triggers an immediate update in the Financial Twin. If a project reaches a "50% completion" attribute, the AI recalculates the Net Present Value (NPV) and Expected Credit Losses (ECL) instantly. This shifts organizations from retrospective reporting to active valuation, where the Fair Value is determined by the "current state" attributes of the asset, including its environmental impact (ESG) and location-based risk.
"The Financial Twin transforms raw data into a living, breathing digital representation of economic reality."
5. The SAP Integrated Financial and Risk Architecture (IFRA)
The global economy stands at a critical juncture. SAP, managing over 70% of global GDP, is positioned to become the backbone of a more resilient economic model through IFRA. This architecture rejects the flat ledger approach of the past, favoring a granular environment where every transaction is tagged with risk and liquidity attributes.
The first pillar of this transformation is the convergence of the physical and financial worlds. SAP Global Track and Trace acts as a real-world oracle, providing IoT-validated visibility into assets across the supply chain. When a shipment’s status changes, the attribute change ripples through IFRA, updating the Financial Twin’s risk profile and capital valuation immediately. In an environment where the Strait of Hormuz is closed, this real-time link between a physical container and a financial risk profile is the difference between solvency and collapse.
"An energy shock is not a line item in a budget; it is a systemic pathogen that infects margins, degrades credit ratings, and exposes the hidden fragilities of the supply chain."
6. Navigating Volatility: The Power of Active Risk Management
As oil prices hover at 100 USD, corporations can no longer rely on traditional, long-term strategies. They must embrace Active Risk Management. Legacy systems were built for long-term health and accuracy but lacked the speed for rapid-fire simulations. SAP HANA’s in-memory computing changes this, allowing for stress tests that once took hours to be completed in near real-time.
At the heart of this capability lies SAP Financial Services Data Management (FSDM). It provides a standardized data model that harmonizes financial, risk, and operational data. Built on HANA, it ensures that every piece of information—from a shipment’s arrival to a liquidity position—is analyzed instantly. This eliminates data silos and enables banks and corporations to operate with speed and confidence, even when geopolitical chokepoints threaten their core operations.
"In a world of physical chokepoints, the ability to re-route capital through smart data is the only true competitive advantage."
7. Capital Optimization: From Project to Product
In the legacy model, capital projects were often viewed as cost-heavy burdens. The Financial Twin paradigm reimagines these projects as Financial Products. Strategic alignment through SAP Project System (PS) and Investment Management (IM) ensures that capital allocation is not fragmented. While PS governs technical execution, IM ensures every dollar spent aligns with value creation.
Furthermore, SAP Treasury and Risk Management (TRM) allows for the dynamic alignment of debt structuring and hedging. If a global project faces a delay—a change in its "timeline" attribute due to energy-related supply chain failures—the TRM module can immediately simulate the impact on debt covenants. This allows for the optimization of interest rate hedges in direct response to the project’s evolving risk profile, ensuring that the 100 USD barrel doesn't drain the company’s liquidity.
"Digital sovereignty is the ultimate intangible asset; it provides the optionality needed to pivot strategies in days rather than quarters."
8. The Technical Foundation: ABAP Cloud and Clean Core
A Financial Twin is only as reliable as the data and logic that underpin it. In a world where a valuation error can lead to a regulatory breach, technical debt becomes a financial risk factor. The Clean Core principle, enforced via ABAP Cloud, is a structural redefinition of financial governance. By separating standard logic from custom extensions, organizations ensure their valuation models remain "upgrade-safe."
Within this framework, the RESTful ABAP Programming Model (RAP) enables developers to act as financial engineers. They can encode complex economic behaviors—such as risk-adjusted margins or sustainability-linked cost of capital—directly into the system architecture. This ensures that the Financial Twin remains a living, accurate system, capable of handling the multidimensional requirements of modern global commerce.
"A high-fidelity Financial Twin turns systemic pressure into structural advantage."
9. Safety Stock: The Physical Hedge and Financial Risk
The volatility of the "Great Compression" has forced a re-evaluation of inventory management. Safety Stock (SS), once viewed purely as a logistics cost, is now recognized as a physical hedge against both commodity price exposure and supply chain credit risk. Holding material on hand is an active defense against the sudden spikes in spot-market prices caused by maritime disruptions.
In a high-interest-rate environment where the cost of capital is elevated, optimizing these physical hedges is the only way to protect the bottom line without over-leveraging. Safety Stock acts as the buffer that guarantees fulfillment, mitigating the financial risk associated with supplier non-performance. This realization transforms inventory optimization into a crucial lever for capital reduction under frameworks like the IFRS 9 Expected Credit Loss (ECL) model.
"Inventory is no longer a cost to be minimized, but a physical hedge to be engineered under capital constraints."
10. Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization (MEIO): Precision Deployment
The key to aligning Safety Stock with financial risk lies in Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization (MEIO). Powered by Integrated Business Planning (IBP), MEIO treats the entire distribution network—from suppliers to final customer-facing warehouses—as a single, interconnected system.
MEIO achieves radical capital efficiency by optimizing the Location of Risk. It calculates the minimal necessary Safety Stock volume across all points (echelons). By exploiting the "risk-pooling effect," it proves that holding stock centrally is often more mathematically efficient than decentralized buffers. This strategy allows organizations to shift capital from highly-volatile inventory to more stable operational capacity, reducing the financial volatility that accompanies an energy shock.
"By leveraging MEIO, organizations can transform operational stability into measurable ECL reductions under IFRS 9 frameworks."
11. Solving the Black Box Problem with Transparency
One of the primary criticisms of AI in the enterprise is its "Black Box" nature. Segmentation and Characteristics-Based Planning provide a roadmap for explainability. When an AI’s decision-making is rooted in attributes, we can audit the logic.
When an AI-driven system adjusts an asset's fair value or denies a credit line, it can provide a precise justification based on qualifying attributes: "The Fair Value decreased because the 'Geopolitical Risk' attribute of the asset's location segment exceeded the volatility threshold." This transparency is vital for building trust with regulators, investors, and partners in an era of heightened economic scrutiny and high-cost capital.
"Modern capital optimization requires the seamless integration of physical reality and digital precision to maintain liquidity in a crisis."
12. Conclusion: The Rise of the Capital Optimization Architect
The global economy is witnessing a trillion-dollar paradigm shift. The energy shock, compounded by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and 100 USD oil, is the ultimate stress test. It exposes the fragility of organizations relying on legacy spreadsheets and fragmented data. As interest rates remain high and supply remains scarce, the ability to orchestrate capital with precision will be the dividing line between the surviving and the insolvent.
A new professional role is emerging: the Capital Optimization Architect. This individual sits at the intersection of technical architecture, treasury strategy, and risk modeling. Their mandate is to orchestrate the various SAP modules into a unified system of value creation. The Financial Twin is the foundation for this capability, transforming the enterprise from a static accounting entity into a dynamic economic organism. In the compressed landscape of the 2020s, this precision is not just a technological luxury; it is the most valuable asset an enterprise can possess.
"The only way to reduce the rising cost of capital in a supply-constrained world is through the absolute transparency provided by the Financial Twin."
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I'm always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#SAPCharacteristicsBasedPlanning #CapitalOptimization #FinancialTwin #TheGreat Compression #StraitOfHormuz #EnergyCrisis #FerranFrances
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Navigating the Great Compression: Orchestrating Capital Optimization through the SAP Financial Twin
The Financial Twin and Integrated Capital Architecture: Orchestrating Resilience in the Age of the
The contemporary global economy is no longer defined by linear growth or predictable cyclicality. Instead, we have entered an era characterized by what can be termed "The Great Compression"—a phenomenon where geopolitical chokepoints, energy volatility, and systemic supply chain fragility converge to exert unprecedented pressure on the corporate balance sheet. In this environment, an energy shock is never an isolated event confined to utility bills or fuel surcharges. It is a multi-dimensional catalyst that destabilizes production costs, inflates financing requirements, and degrades the credit quality of entire industrial ecosystems.
To navigate this, organizations must move beyond siloed management and adopt a holistic orchestration of both tangible and intangible assets. By leveraging a digital core—specifically through advanced ERP systems, Financial Services Data Management (FSDM), and the "Financial Twin" concept—enterprises can transform these systemic pressures into a strategic advantage in capital optimization. This is particularly vital as the world faces a burgeoning supply crisis driven by the tightening of the Strait of Hormuz. This maritime strangulation does not merely delay cargo; it creates an inflationary shockwave that makes it increasingly difficult for many companies to service their interest payments. In such a scenario, the cost of capital inevitably spikes, and the only viable alternative for survival is to reduce that cost through radical transparency and data-driven precision.
"We are moving from an era of global abundance to a reality of localized chokepoints, where the speed of data must exceed the speed of the crisis."
1. The Energy Shock as a Systemic Pathogen
Traditionally, industrial management viewed energy shocks through the narrow lens of Variable Costs. When the price of natural gas or electricity spikes, the immediate response is typically focused on operational efficiency or price pass-throughs. However, in the modern "Great Compression," an energy shock acts more like a systemic pathogen that migrates through the financial circulatory system of a company.
First, the impact on Production Costs is immediate and brutal. For energy-intensive industries, the sudden shift in the cost-of-goods-sold (COGS) erodes gross margins faster than most procurement strategies can compensate. This is the visible layer. Beneath it lies the second wave: the Financing Cost escalation. As margins shrink, a company’s internal cash generation weakens, forcing a greater reliance on external credit lines. Simultaneously, central banks often respond to energy-driven inflation by raising interest rates, creating a "double squeeze" where the cost of borrowing rises exactly when the need for liquidity is highest. This is further exacerbated by the threat to the Strait of Hormuz, which acts as a chokehold on global energy supplies, driving up the risk premiums that lenders demand from even established corporations.
"An energy shock is not a line item in a budget; it is a systemic pathogen that infects margins, degrades credit ratings, and exposes the hidden fragilities of the supply chain."
2. The Contagion of Credit Risk and Supply Chain Fragility
The third and perhaps most dangerous manifestation of an energy shock is the degradation of the Counterparty Risk Profile. A company does not exist in a vacuum; it is a node in a vast network of suppliers and customers. When energy prices soar due to geopolitical instability, suppliers face the same margin compression. If a Tier-2 supplier of a critical component lacks the financial resilience to absorb these costs, the entire production schedule is at risk. This is the "Supply Chain Chokepoint" made manifest.
On the flip side, the Credit Risk of Customers becomes a looming liability. Customers who previously enjoyed stable credit ratings may suddenly find their interest coverage ratios plummeting. For an enterprise, this means that Accounts Receivable (AR)—a primary tangible asset—suddenly carries a much higher probability of default. Without a real-time view of these interdependencies, management is essentially flying blind, using lagging indicators to solve leading-edge crises. As the Strait of Hormuz remains a flashpoint for supply disruption, the resulting scarcity ensures that only those with the most transparent and verified financial data will maintain access to affordable credit.
"In a world of physical chokepoints, the ability to re-route capital through smart data is the only true competitive advantage."
3. From Geopolitical Chokepoints to Digital Resilience
As outlined in recent strategic discourses, we are seeing a shift from global abundance to localized scarcity. Geopolitical chokepoints—whether they are physical maritime routes like the Strait of Hormuz or digital data silos—are being weaponized. In this context, "Digital Sovereignty" and "Data Fluidity" become the ultimate intangible assets.
The transition from traditional "Just-in-Time" models to "Just-in-Case" resilience requires a fundamental re-evaluation of how we value assets. An intangible asset, such as a highly optimized, real-time logistics algorithm or a proprietary risk-scoring model, can be more valuable during an energy crisis than the physical machinery it controls. These digital assets allow a firm to anticipate which nodes in their network will fail first under energy stress and proactively re-route capital or procurement. Transparency is no longer just a compliance requirement; it is the mechanism by which the cost of capital is lowered by providing lenders with the certainty they crave in an uncertain world.
"Digital sovereignty is the ultimate intangible asset; it provides the optionality needed to pivot strategies in days rather than quarters."
4. The Role of the Financial Twin: Orchestrating the Digital Core
To manage this complexity, the integration of an advanced ERP system and a specialized Financial Services Data Management layer is non-negotiable. The goal is the creation of a Financial Twin. Just as a digital twin in manufacturing mirrors a physical machine, a Financial Twin mirrors the entire economic lifecycle of the enterprise in real-time.
Real-Time Production and Inventory Optimization: By integrating Integrated Business Planning (IBP) modules, firms can run "what-if" simulations on energy price volatility and supply route closures. If the cost of transport through the Middle East doubles, the system can automatically recalculate the profitability of every SKU. This enables "Dynamic Re-prioritization"—shifting production toward high-margin, low-energy products before the financial close even occurs.
Bridging the Gap between Logistics and Finance: The true power lies in linking the physical supply chain with the balance sheet. By utilizing FSDM protocols, corporations can implement Supply Chain Finance (SCF) programs triggered by real-time logistics data. For instance, if a supplier is flagged as "high risk" due to the Hormuz strangulation, the enterprise can offer early payment programs to ensure the supplier’s survival, protecting its own production continuity.
Capital Optimization and Regulatory Alignment: For large enterprises, the energy shock creates a regulatory challenge. Rising credit risk increases "Risk-Weighted Assets" (RWA), which demands more Tier-1 capital. By using sophisticated risk engines, firms can achieve Capital Optimization. Instead of holding broad, inefficient capital buffers, they can use granular data to prove to regulators that their specific risk exposure is mitigated by real-time hedging and supplier-level monitoring.
"Resilience is not about having a bigger buffer; it is about having better information. A high-fidelity Financial Twin turns systemic pressure into structural advantage."
5. Safety Stock: The Physical Hedge and Financial Risk
In the face of systemic market volatility, the distinction between operational risk and financial risk has dissolved. Safety Stock (SS), traditionally viewed purely as a logistics buffer, must now be recognized in its true economic role: a physical hedge against both commodity price exposure and supply chain credit risk. This realization transforms inventory optimization into a crucial lever for capital reduction under frameworks like the IFRS 9 Expected Credit Loss (ECL).
Safety Stock serves two critical financial functions. First, it is a Hedge Against Commodity Price Risk. Holding material on hand is an active defense against unexpected spikes in spot-market prices caused by geopolitical tensions. Second, it is a Hedge Against Supply Chain Credit Risk. When a key supplier fails or a shipping lane is blocked, the resulting stock-out risks losing a confirmed sales order. SS is the buffer that guarantees fulfillment, mitigating the financial risk associated with supplier non-performance. In a high-interest-rate environment, where the ability to pay interest is strained, optimizing these physical hedges is the only way to protect the bottom line without over-leveraging.
"Inventory is no longer a cost to be minimized, but a physical hedge to be engineered under capital constraints."
6. Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization (MEIO): Precision Capital Deployment
The key to aligning Safety Stock with financial risk lies in Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization (MEIO). Powered by Integrated Business Planning, MEIO treats the entire distribution network—from suppliers to final customer-facing warehouses—as a single, interconnected system of risk and capital.
MEIO achieves radical capital efficiency by optimizing the Location of Risk. It calculates the minimal necessary Safety Stock volume across all points (echelons). By exploiting the "risk-pooling effect," MEIO proves that holding SS centrally is mathematically more efficient than holding decentralized buffers. Furthermore, it allows for Shifting Capital from Inventory to Capacity. MEIO identifies where increasing production or transportation capacity is a cheaper hedge against uncertainty than holding expensive, high-obsolescence inventory. This strategy shifts capital from highly-volatile, high-ECL inventory to less volatile Operating Expense or Fixed Assets.
"By leveraging MEIO, organizations can transform operational stability into measurable ECL reductions under IFRS 9 frameworks."
7. The Integrated Financial Architecture for Quantifying Risk
The true power of MEIO is realized when its optimized data is integrated into financial and risk platforms like Financial Services Data Management (FSDM) and Integrated Financial Risk Analytics (IFRA). These platforms provide the computational and data governance backbone for modern capital calculation.
FSDM acts as the central, unified data repository and harmonization layer, providing a Single Source of Truth. It ingests granular data from the supply chain layer and aligns it with core financial data, such as product cost and customer credit ratings. This is crucial for IFRS 9, which requires massive amounts of historical and forward-looking data to determine the correct impairment stage of assets. IFRA then uses this harmonized data to perform complex calculations, such as Precision Expected Credit Loss (ECL) and Value at Risk (VaR). By quantifying the operational stability provided by optimized supply buffers, firms can justify lower capital charges to their lenders and investors.
"The goal of modern architecture is to shift capital from high-volatility inventory to resilient operational capacity."
8. Holistic Management of Tangible and Intangible Assets
The Great Compression demands a move away from "Departmental Excellence" toward "Networked Orchestration." In this new paradigm, the management of assets must be holistic. Tangible assets like inventory and cash must be treated as fluid resources. Real-time visibility prevents "Capital Trapping"—where money is tied up in slow-moving inventory while energy costs are draining cash reserves elsewhere.
Intangible assets, such as data and relationships, are the stabilizers. The "Smart Data" generated by an integrated ecosystem is the most potent intangible asset a CEO possesses. It provides the "Optionality" needed to pivot strategies in days rather than quarters. The fusion of the Great Compression theory with a technical architecture reveals that the only way to survive an energy-driven inflationary spiral is through Information Isomorphism. The data in the system must perfectly reflect the reality on the ground. When the cost of a kilowatt-hour changes or the Strait of Hormuz is throttled, that information should immediately ripple through to the financial risk calculations in the treasury department.
"Modern capital optimization requires the seamless integration of physical reality and digital precision to maintain liquidity in a crisis."
9. Conclusion: The Strategic Imperative
We are currently witnessing a trillion-dollar paradigm shift in how global value chains are managed. The energy shock, compounded by the potential for a total blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, is the ultimate "stress test." It exposes who has invested in digital resilience and who is still relying on legacy spreadsheets. As interest rates remain high and supply remains scarce, the ability to pay interest will become the dividing line between the surviving and the insolvent.
A truly modern organization does not see an energy crisis as merely a cost problem. They see it as a signal to re-allocate capital, strengthen supply chain ties through FinTech integration, and optimize the balance sheet. By merging the physical realities of energy and logistics with the digital precision of real-time financial data, we move beyond mere survival. We enter a state of structural advantage where the "Great Compression" becomes the forge for a more resilient, more profitable, and more technologically advanced enterprise. The future belongs to those who can see the invisible threads linking a maritime chokepoint to a credit rating, and who have the infrastructure to manage both as one single, integrated reality.
"The only way to reduce the rising cost of capital in a supply-constrained world is through the absolute transparency provided by the Financial Twin."
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I'm always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#SAP #SupplyChainResilience #GreatCompression #FinancialTwin #S4HANA #DigitalTransformation #CapitalOptimization #SAPIBP #DemandPlanning #SupplyChainFinance #IFRS9 #RiskManagement #EnergyCrisis #FerranFrances
SAP-Driven Capital Optimization: Navigating Global Supply Shocks and High Interest Regimes through Unified Financial Intelligence
The New Era of Capital Intelligence: Navigating Scarcity through Financial and Operational Convergence
The global economic landscape has reached a structural point of no return. The era of cheap, abundant liquidity—sustained for decades by negligible interest rates, synchronized globalization, and stable supply chains—has definitively ended. In its place, a new operating regime has emerged, defined by persistent inflationary pressures, geopolitical fragmentation, and a structurally higher cost of capital.
Today, capital is no longer a passive line item on a balance sheet or a mere regulatory constraint; it has become a strategic competitive weapon. How efficiently an enterprise prices, protects, deploys, and releases capital now determines its capacity for investment, its operational resilience, and its ultimate survival. This shift has elevated capital optimization from a specialized treasury task to a multidimensional, enterprise-wide necessity where finance, risk, and operations must converge.
This convergence is being tested by immediate geopolitical realities. The escalating crisis in the Middle East, specifically the potential for prolonged supply disruptions and the "strangling" of the Strait of Hormuz, is creating a massive supply-side shock. As energy costs spike and supply chains fracture, the resulting "supply-push" inflation is forcing central banks to maintain high interest rates. For many companies, this creates a lethal pincer movement: declining operational throughput combined with an inability to service debt at current rates. In this scenario, the cost of capital is skyrocketing, and the only viable alternative to insolvency or stagnation is reducing that cost through radical transparency and integrated intelligence.
"In a world of structural scarcity, the distinction between a supply chain manager and a financial risk officer is rapidly disappearing; both are now ultimately managers of capital."
I. Regulatory Integration: Bridging the Gap Between Risk and Finance
Historically, regulatory frameworks like IFRS 9 and Basel IV have been treated as parallel universes within the same institution. This separation leads to data duplication, redundant calculations, and long reconciliation cycles. More importantly, it creates structural inconsistencies that mask the true cost of doing business.
When these frameworks operate in silos, the result is capital inefficiency. However, by utilizing a unified financial and risk architecture, regulation stops being a compliance burden and becomes strategic intelligence. A unified subledger approach allows for transaction-level granularity where Expected Credit Loss (ECL) and Risk-Weighted Assets (RWA) are derived from the same data source. This alignment enables institutions to calculate the true marginal economic cost of credit at the instrument level, allowing for more precise pricing and capital allocation.
"Regulatory frameworks are no longer just hurdles to clear; they are the data-rich environments where the competitive battle for capital efficiency is won or lost."
II. Dynamic Collateral Engineering and Capital Release
Collateral remains one of the most underutilized levers in the quest for capital efficiency. Traditionally treated as static metadata—captured at origination and rarely revalued—it often leads to overstated Loss Given Default (LGD) figures and trapped capital.
In the current high-interest environment, transforming collateral into a live optimization variable is essential. By integrating real-time valuation, legal enforceability scoring, and automated LGD recalibration, collateral moves from an administrative record to a sophisticated capital control mechanism. This "capital engineering" allows for the algorithmic release of liquidity, lowering provisions and strengthening capital ratios almost instantaneously. This is particularly critical as companies face the liquidity squeeze brought on by maritime trade disruptions, where every basis point of released capital can be redeployed to secure alternative logistics routes.
"Static collateral is wasted potential; dynamic collateral management is the key to unlocking the liquidity hidden within the balance sheet."
III. The Capital-Intelligent Supply Chain: Inventory as a Financial Asset
For manufacturing, energy, and distribution firms, the largest consumer of capital is inventory. The traditional response to uncertainty—such as the current instability in the Strait of Hormuz—is to build "safety stock." However, in an era of high interest rates, excess inventory is an incredibly expensive buffer.
A capital-intelligent supply chain treats inventory not just as physical stock, but as capital in physical form. By shifting from SKU-based forecasting to attribute-based planning, organizations can segment inventory by margin, volatility, and financial risk. This allows for Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization (MEIO), which reduces the Exposure at Default (EAD) and minimizes capital provisions for obsolescence. The goal is the "autonomous supply chain"—one that senses geopolitical disruption and automatically re-optimizes to minimize the Total Cost, which equals Operational Cost plus the Cost of Risk.
"Inventory is simply capital waiting for a purpose; the more efficiently it moves, the less it costs to maintain the enterprise's heartbeat."
IV. Contract Intelligence and the Legal Surface of Capital
Contracts have evolved into direct capital risk vectors. Pricing clauses, collateral triggers, and ESG obligations are no longer just legal formalities; they are embedded financial exposures. As supply chains face "strangulation" in key corridors, the ability to validate clauses and trigger dynamic pricing or collateral shifts in real-time becomes a survival trait.
By transforming contracts into active instruments of governance, companies can gain real-time visibility into counterparty risk and exposure alerts. This ensures that the legal framework of the company supports, rather than hinders, capital fluidity during times of crisis.
"The modern contract is a living financial instrument; if it is not integrated into your risk engine, it is a dormant liability."
V. Project Execution as a Financial Product
Large-scale infrastructure and energy projects are increasingly behaving like complex financial instruments. Their lifecycle requires a closed-loop architecture that connects operational milestones with multi-GAAP valuation and capital market connectivity.
By merging project execution data with investment management and treasury logic, organizations can transform massive capital expenditures into efficient investment vehicles. This ensures that even as the cost of capital rises, projects remain viable through precise funding, hedging, and investor logic integration.
"Complexity in execution must be met with simplicity in valuation; a project that cannot be transparency priced will never be efficiently funded."
VI. The Total Cost Objective: Merging IBP and Risk Analytics
The artificial divide between tangible capital (inventory and assets) and intangible capital (liquidity and regulatory reserves) must be dissolved. The ultimate goal for the modern enterprise is a feedback loop where financial risk analytics inform operational planning in real-time.
Consider a freight route example:
Isolated Optimization: Sea freight through a volatile corridor costs $10,000, while air freight costs $12,000. The company chooses sea freight to save $2,000.
Integrated Optimization: Risk analytics identify significant FX volatility and delivery risks due to the Strait of Hormuz crisis, adding $4,000 in "capital cost" (the cost of the risk and the required reserves). The true cost of sea freight is now $14,000. Air freight becomes the optimal choice.
By embedding the Cost of Risk directly into the optimization engine, the CFO and COO are finally solving the same equation.
"Transparency is the only antidote to a rising cost of capital; you cannot optimize what you do not explicitly quantify."
VII. Conclusion: The Rise of the Capital Optimization Architect
As finance, risk, and operations converge, a new professional role is emerging: the Capital Optimization Architect. This role sits at the intersection of risk modeling, data architecture, and supply chain strategy. Their mission is not just system implementation, but the design of a resilient capital system.
In the post-liquidity era, competitive advantage belongs to the enterprises that can sense, simulate, and respond to global shocks continuously, rather than quarterly. Treating capital as a design variable—rather than a passive outcome—is the foundation of growth in a world where the old rules of abundant money no longer apply.
"The future belongs to those who view the balance sheet not as a report of the past, but as a blueprint for operational maneuverability."
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I'm always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#SAP #SupplyChainResilience #GreatCompression #FinancialTwin #S4HANA #DigitalTransformation #CapitalOptimization #SAPIBP #DemandPlanning #SupplyChainFinance #IFRS9 #RiskManagement #EnergyCrisis #FerranFrances
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Beyond Pro-Cyclicality: Capital Optimization in a Resource-Scarce Economy Powered by SAP Financial Digital Twins
Introduction: The Structural Failure of Pro-Cyclical Regulation
For decades, the global financial architecture has been built upon a reactive philosophy. Regulations like Basel IV and IFRS 9 were conceived as safety nets, designed to ensure that banks hold enough capital to survive the very storms their lending patterns often help create. However, as the global economy enters an era of persistent capital scarcity and structural volatility, the traditional methods of managing "pro-cyclicality" are revealing themselves to be fundamentally flawed.
The conventional approach to financial resilience—building counter-cyclical buffers and dynamic provisioning—aims to smooth the "Credit Crunch" by forcing banks to save during the fat years to survive the lean ones. While noble in intent, this strategy introduces massive economic frictions. In essence, holding vast sums of stagnant capital as a "just-in-case" measure is an immense waste of economic potential. In a world where capital is increasingly scarce and expensive, we can no longer afford the luxury of idle safety buffers.
The radical shift required is not merely a better way to calculate risk, but a fundamental move away from a system based on the "estimation of solvency" and the "promise of payment." We must transition toward a system of direct financing of the economic flow. This evolution requires a digital synthesis: the integration of SAP Active Risk Management, Financial Digital Twins, and the Logistics Business Network (LBN) to create a real-time, flow-based financial reality.
“Pro-cyclicality is not a regulatory flaw — it is the architectural consequence of financing promises instead of observable economic flow.”
The Friction of Resilience: Why Capital Buffers are a Waste
The current regulatory debate focuses on how to reconcile the prudential requirements of Basel IV with the accounting mandates of IFRS 9. The goal is to prevent banks from pulling back on lending during a recession (pro-cyclicality). The proposed solution is "counter-cyclicality"—building reserves during expansions.
However, we must confront a hard truth: every dollar, euro, or yen held in a regulatory buffer is a dollar withdrawn from the productive economy. This is the "Friction of Resilience." By requiring banks to lock away capital to protect against the possibility of future defaults, the regulatory system inadvertently stunts the very growth it seeks to protect.
Furthermore, these buffers are based on the "Estimation of Solvency." This is an exercise in historical projection—using past data to guess whether a borrower will be able to fulfill a "promise of payment" in an uncertain future. This estimation is inherently imprecise, leading to either under-provisioning (which causes systemic risk) or over-provisioning (which causes capital waste). In an environment of capital scarcity, this inefficiency is no longer sustainable. We are effectively trying to solve a 21st-century flow problem with 19th-century static balance sheet logic.
“Capital buffers exist because transparency does not. When risk becomes visible in real time, idle capital becomes obsolete.”
The Radical Paradigm Shift: From Solvency to Flow
The true solution to pro-cyclicality does not lie in better buffers, but in eliminating the information asymmetry that makes buffers necessary. We are moving from a financial system based on creditworthiness to one based on verifiable economic velocity.
Instead of financing a company based on its balance sheet (a snapshot of the past), the future of finance lies in the direct financing of the economic flow (the reality of the present). This means financing the movement of goods, the fulfillment of orders, and the execution of services in real-time. When you finance the flow directly, the "promise of payment" is replaced by the "execution of value."
This shift removes the need for massive capital cushions because the risk is no longer tied to the abstract solvency of an entity over a multi-year horizon. Instead, risk is tied to the transparency of a specific economic transaction. To achieve this, we need a digital infrastructure that can bridge the gap between the physical supply chain and the financial ledger. This is where the SAP ecosystem—specifically SAP IFRA, S/4HANA, and the Logistics Business Network—becomes the catalyst for a new financial era.
“The future of banking is not balance-sheet driven. It is flow-driven — financing execution, not estimation.”
The Digital Twin: Bridging Physical and Financial Realities
The cornerstone of this transition is the "Financial Digital Twin." In the SAP framework, this is achieved by integrating SAP Integrated Business Planning (IBP) and S/4HANA with the Logistics Business Network (LBN).
A Financial Digital Twin is a real-time, virtual representation of the physical supply chain. When a ship leaves a port, when a raw material is transformed into a finished product, or when a delivery is confirmed via SAP LBN, that physical event is instantly reflected in the financial digital twin.
This level of integration allows for "Active Risk Management." We no longer need to wait for a quarterly financial statement to see if a company is struggling. The data flow from the LBN provides an immediate, high-fidelity view of economic activity. If the flow stops, the risk is identified instantly. If the flow accelerates, capital can be deployed immediately. This is the end of "estimation" and the beginning of "financial intelligence."
“We must move beyond solvency estimation toward verifiable economic velocity. Flow is the new collateral.”
SAP IFRA and FSDM: The Infrastructure of Flow-Based Finance
To manage this transition, banks and corporations require a sophisticated data architecture. SAP Integrated Financial and Risk Architecture (IFRA) and Financial Services Data Management (FSDM) provide the necessary "Single Source of Truth."
In a flow-based system, the distinction between "Risk" and "Finance" evaporates. SAP IFRA allows for the consolidation of operational data (from the supply chain) and financial data (from the ledger) into a unified analytical layer. This enables:
Real-Time Capital Optimization: Instead of calculating RWA (Risk-Weighted Assets) on a monthly or quarterly basis, institutions can optimize capital allocation daily based on actual economic throughput.
Dynamic Provisioning without Friction: Provisions are no longer "generic" guesses. They become specific, micro-adjustments tied to the actual state of the goods in transit or the services being rendered.
Elimination of Capital Waste: By having perfect visibility into the economic flow, the "safety margin" required by regulators can be reduced significantly. Capital is freed from stagnant buffers and re-injected into the flow.
Beyond Basel IV and IFRS 9: Reconciling via Transparency
While Basel IV and IFRS 9 are currently viewed as burdens that create pro-cyclicality, the "Digital Synthesis" transforms them into automated outputs of a transparent system.
When you use SAP FPSL (Financial Products Subledger) in conjunction with SAP LBN, the Expected Credit Loss (ECL) calculation of IFRS 9 is no longer a subjective exercise by an accounting department. It becomes a data-driven reflection of the supply chain's health. If the Logistics Business Network shows that a supplier's lead times are increasing or that their tier-2 suppliers are failing, the Financial Digital Twin automatically adjusts the risk parameters in the subledger.
This is the reconciliation of prudential and accounting regulations through technology. We are not just "complying" with Basel IV; we are making it obsolete by providing a level of transparency that renders "worst-case scenario" capital buffers unnecessary. We move from a world of "Maximum Probable Loss" to "Observable Real-Time Risk."
“Holding capital ‘just in case’ is a luxury of abundance. In a resource-scarce economy, every unit of capital must actively support economic flow.”
The End of the Credit Crunch
The "Credit Crunch" is a symptom of blindness. Banks stop lending during a recession because they cannot see which companies are still viable and which are not. They default to a "risk-off" stance, punishing the healthy and the sick alike.
Direct financing of the economic flow solves this. Even in a deep recession, certain economic flows remain vital. By financing the flow (tracked through SAP LBN) rather than the entity (the traditional bank loan), capital continues to move. A bank may not want to lend to a struggling retailer, but it will certainly finance the specific flow of essential goods that the retailer is successfully moving to consumers.
This is the ultimate counter-cyclical measure. It doesn't rely on buffers; it relies on the continuous, transparent movement of value. It ensures that liquidity is always available where there is economic activity, regardless of the broader macro-economic climate.
“Banks don’t stop lending because risk rises. They stop lending because they lose sight of economic reality.”
Strategic Implementation: The SAP Path to Resilience
For the Capital Optimization Architect, the mission is clear: we must stop building bigger walls (capital buffers) and start building better sensors (Digital Twins). The implementation of this vision follows a clear technological roadmap:
Step 1: Harmonize the Data Foundation (SAP FSDM). Centralize all operational and financial data to ensure that every part of the organization is looking at the same reality.
Step 2: Activate the Logistics Business Network (SAP LBN). Connect the bank or the corporate treasury directly to the physical reality of the supply chain.
Step 3: Deploy the Financial Digital Twin. Use SAP IBP and S/4HANA to create a real-time simulation of the financial impact of physical events.
Step 4: Automate Compliance and Optimization (SAP IFRA + FPSL). Let the system handle the complexities of Basel IV and IFRS 9 as a byproduct of its operational intelligence, while focusing human talent on strategic capital deployment.
Conclusion: The Future is Fluid
The era of stagnant capital is coming to an end. The frictions introduced by pro-cyclical regulations and the waste inherent in massive capital buffers are luxuries of a past age of abundance. In the new era of capital scarcity, we must demand that every unit of capital is actively supporting an economic flow.
By moving away from the "promise of payment" and toward the "direct financing of flow," we don't just solve the problem of pro-cyclicality—we transcend it. Through the digital synthesis of SAP Active Risk Management, Financial Digital Twins, and the Logistics Business Network, we can build a financial system that is not just resilient, but truly intelligent.
The radical change is here. It is time to stop estimating solvency and start financing the pulse of the global economy.
“Risk is no longer a forecast. It is a live signal.”
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I'm always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#FlowBasedFinance #CapitalOptimization #FinancialDigitalTwin #BeyondProCyclicality #BankingTransformation #SAPBanking #IFRA #BaselIV #IFRS9 #ActiveRiskManagement #DigitalFinance #FutureOfBanking #SystemicResilience #CapitalScarcity #DataDrivenBanking #EmbeddedFinance #CreditCrunch #SupplyChainFinance #FinancialArchitecture #FerranFrances
The Architecture of Capital Optimization: From Legacy Intermediation to the Global Financial Airbnb over SAP Ecosystems
I. The Ontological Genesis: The Great Disconnect and the Failure of Traditional Banking
For decades, a profound irony has governed the evolution of global financial technology. While the "real economy"—encompassing manufacturing, logistics, retail, and energy—has undergone a radical digital transformation, the banking sector remains anchored in a structural paradox. The industry’s readiness for excellence was vastly overestimated for years. Traditional financial institutions are currently propped up by obsolete legacy technologies, creating a fundamental mismatch between modern architectural excellence and archaic traditional finance. You cannot install a high-performance engine into a crumbling, rusted chassis.
The path forward requires a brutal acknowledgement: the "dinosaur banks" are structured for a bygone era of opacity, manual intermediation, and rent-seeking. They are built on systems that cannot handle real-time, granular data integrity. Trying to "fix" these dinosaurs is a sunk cost; they are condemned to disappear because of a lack of evolutionary agility. In the era of hyper-connectivity, trust no longer resides in an institution; it resides in real-time verified data. The current banking model, which analyzes financial health using static photos of the past like audited balance sheets, is being rendered obsolete by an ecosystem that operates with data of the future (orders) and the present (real-time shipments).
"We must stop trying to teach old dinosaurs how to fly; they were built for the mud of the 20th century... These institutions are structured for a bygone era of opacity, manual intermediation, and rent-seeking."
II. The Dawn of the Financial Airbnb: Leveraging the 70% of Global GDP
The "Financial Airbnb" is the organic conclusion of three decades of enterprise data maturation. Since the early 1990s, when Fortune 500 companies began implementing SAP R/3, the global economy has been undergoing a systematic process of digital mapping. Today, SAP systems touch approximately 77% of the world’s transaction revenue. This immense footprint represents the majority of the world’s GDP, managed through complex enterprise resource planning systems that oversee everything from raw material procurement to final product delivery.
Much like Airbnb owns no hotels, this new "Financial Airbnb" model does not seek to be a bank. Instead, it acts as a Business Intelligence Layer that translates physical events—a container arrival, a verified temperature, a confirmed delivery—into Peer-to-Peer (P2P) financial contracts. It is an orchestrator that fits the puzzle pieces of the real economy. If a Fortune 500 company has excess capital and a supplier requires immediate payment, the network facilitates this exchange directly, bypassing the parasitic layer of traditional intermediation. This democratization of capital access exposes previously invisible logistical assets, turning every pallet and every purchase order into a synthetic financial instrument.
"The 'Financial Airbnb' is the culmination of this transition: the democratization of capital access by exposing previously invisible logistical assets... Every pallet in a warehouse, every container at sea, and every purchase order in SAP IBP is, essentially, a synthetic financial instrument waiting to be activated."
III. The Event-Driven Revolution: SAP Event Mesh and the Ultimate Margin Call
The convergence of SAP Event Mesh and SAP Global Track and Trace (GTT) is creating a nervous system for global trade. Historically, the true potential of enterprise data was locked in silos. Now, these tools enable the "Ultimate Margin Call," a vision of a world where physical movement translates instantly into financial liquidity. In a structurally capital-scarce environment, exacerbated by global debt crises and geopolitical tensions in corridors like the Persian Gulf, companies can no longer afford "dead" inventory.
In this event-driven economy, the capital does not wait for post-facto reports or manual reconciliations. If IoT sensors detect a detour or a disruption in a shipment, the SAP Event Mesh broadcasts this event instantly. A Smart Contract perceives the change in the asset's "Financial Twin" and executes a collateral adjustment or a liquidity shift in real-time. This eliminates the "Trust Gap" that traditional banks use to justify high credit spreads and fees. When truth is instant and verified by the logistics chain, the bank's role as a "sink of trust" evaporates. We are moving from an economy of "promises of payment" to an economy of "evidences of flow."
"The convergence of SAP Event Mesh and SAP Global Track and Trace (GTT) is now unlocking this potential, creating a nervous system for global trade that enables the 'Ultimate Margin Call.' This is the vision of a world where physical movement translates instantly into financial liquidity through Smart Contracts."
IV. Strategic Metrics: RANM and the Optimization of Capital Intelligence
In this new paradigm, RANM (Return on Assets Net Margin) emerges as the strategic compass for corporate survival. It represents the ultimate efficiency: how much real net margin each dollar of asset committed in the operation generates. Optimizing RANM requires prioritizing capital allocation toward the most efficient flows, a feat only possible through the deep integration of physical and financial processes provided by SAP S/4HANA.
However, a systemic failure often exists in implementation: Data Quality. In the banking sector, the "Garbage In, Garbage Out" (GIBO) principle is a silent killer. Most banks operate on fragmented legacy systems where data is manually patched. Attempting high-precision simulations on "trash data" results in "trash optimization." The solution is to extract "Capital Intelligence" directly from the SAP DNA of the supply chain. Because SAP data is tied to physical operations and real-time sales, its quality is intrinsically higher. By looking at the supply chain instead of broken bank silos, we achieve the precision necessary for true capital optimization.
"The only way to reach the efficiency described by Ferran Frances is to stop looking at banking books and start looking at the SAP DNA of the global supply chain."
V. The Financial Twin and Predictive Orchestration
The Financial Twin is the digital mirror of a company's operational reality, fed by the native integration of SAP S/4HANA Finance with operational modules like MM, SD, and PP. When a material moves or a contract is signed, the financial impact is reflected instantly in the Universal Journal. This is supplemented by Predictive Accounting, which allows the Twin to "foresee" future cash flows before the traditional accounting event occurs.
The Financial Airbnb acts as the Brain or the Orchestrator of this Twin. While multinational companies possess all the "puzzle pieces," they often lack the specialized skills to organize them into a dynamic allocation of capital. The orchestrator identifies surplus and deficit, moving resources toward the highest strategic value. For example, stock in transit may have zero value to a traditional bank balance sheet, but it has extreme marginal utility for a manufacturer needing to fulfill a contract. The orchestrator assigns the asset to the counterparty for whom it has the highest strategic value, optimizing the puzzle of global liquidity.
"Optimizing consists of detecting deficits and surpluses of capital, moving the resource toward the deficit with the guarantees offered by granular knowledge of the operation... assigning the collateral to the counterparty for whom that asset has the highest strategic value."
VI. Compatibility and the Urgency of Cloud Maturity
A common misconception is that companies must reach a state of "Technological Nirvana" in the cloud to access these models. In reality, nearly 99% of SAP customers, including those on legacy ECC versions, already possess the maturity to integrate. If a system can generate an IDoc—a capability present for decades—it can feed the event engine. The architecture acts as an "intelligent bridge" from the client's current state to the future of synthetic capital.
However, there is a strategic urgency. As the majority of the world's GDP migrates to the SAP Cloud, the "Crisis of Capital" will accelerate. Those who do not migrate to a standardized, real-time environment will struggle to compete in a market where access to liquidity is the primary factor of survival. While traditional banks take years to modernize their core systems, the SAP-driven orchestrator is already operating on the "physical truth" of assets. The competitive advantage is not just software; it is thirty years of integrated business logic.
"This disappearance will not be just for not using AI, but for the Capital Crisis... while the traditional financial sector tries to modernize its heavy core systems, we are already operating on the 'physical truth' of the assets flowing through SAP."
VII. Conclusion: The New Order of Capital Sovereignty
The transition from a reactive, parasitic financial system to a proactive, integrated orchestration layer is inevitable. In the evolution of global commerce, traditional banks are becoming the dinosaurs of the modern era—massive, slow-moving entities that once dominated because they controlled the "clima" of capital. But the environment has changed. The "asteroid" of real-time data has already hit.
By 2030, the Financial Airbnb will be the final piece of globalization. The value will shift from those who "have the money" to those who "manage the network." In this new order, certainty does not emanate from a financial institution, but from the precision of shared data. Capital has finally found its final form: it is not a currency, but an algorithm that understands the supply chain. Corporations that fail to integrate their flows into this global puzzle are destined for extinction, leaving behind only the fossils of old banking practices. The key to this transformation is already in the hands of the 99% of SAP users; it is no longer a technical hurdle, but a leadership decision to speak the language of global logistics.
"Capital has found its final form: it is not a currency, but an algorithm that understands the supply chain... This represents the greatest transfer of economic power since the invention of fractional reserve banking."
VIII. Quantifying the Capital Efficiency Revolution
The architectural shift described above is not merely conceptual; its economic implications are measurable at a global scale. By translating operational truth into real-time financial certainty, the Financial Airbnb model compresses the fundamental drivers of capital cost: information asymmetry, collateral uncertainty, and intermediation spreads.
To estimate the macroeconomic impact, consider the following structural parameters of the global economy.
Global GDP currently stands at approximately $105 trillion, while enterprise working capital—comprising inventories, trade receivables, and short-term financing—typically represents around 20% of economic activity. This implies a global operational capital base of roughly $21 trillion.
SAP ecosystems already manage a significant portion of the operational infrastructure of the world economy. With SAP systems touching approximately 77% of global transaction revenue, the capital base embedded within SAP-managed supply chains can be conservatively estimated at approximately $16 trillion.
Under traditional financial intermediation, the average cost of capital associated with this operational layer—combining bank credit spreads, trade finance costs, and liquidity buffers—typically ranges between 7% and 9%, with 8% as a reasonable global benchmark.
This implies that the annual financial cost of maintaining global operational liquidity within SAP-mediated supply chains is approximately:
$1.3 trillion per year.
The event-driven financing architecture proposed in this paper reduces three structural frictions:
Information asymmetry, through real-time operational verification
Collateral uncertainty, via event-driven asset tracking
Intermediation spreads, by enabling peer-to-peer capital matching
Based on empirical spreads observed in supply chain finance and digital lending platforms, a 15%–30% reduction in effective capital cost is economically plausible once event-driven collateral verification replaces traditional credit intermediation.
Under a central scenario of 20% cost compression, the global financial savings generated by this architecture would reach approximately:
$260 billion per year.
Even under a conservative scenario of 10% efficiency gains, the system would still generate approximately $130 billion in annual capital cost reductions. In a fully mature ecosystem, where liquidity flows autonomously through real-time verified logistics events, the savings could approach $390 billion annually.
These numbers illustrate the true scale of the transformation. The Financial Airbnb is not merely a fintech innovation; it represents a structural optimization of global capital allocation.
In practical terms, the model reduces the effective cost of operational capital from approximately 8% to roughly 6.4% in the central scenario—a 160 basis point reduction across trillions of dollars of productive assets.
In this context, SAP ecosystems are not merely enterprise software environments. They are the latent infrastructure of a planetary liquidity network, waiting to be activated by an orchestration layer capable of translating operational truth into financial certainty.
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I’m always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#FinancialTwin #SAP #S4HANA #UniversalJournal #CapitalOptimization #DigitalFinance #EnterpriseArchitecture #PredictiveAccounting #ContinuousClose #SAPBusinessNetwork #SupplyChainFinance #AssetCollaboration #RealTimeFinance #CFOAgenda #AutonomousEnterprise #GreenLedger #FerranFrances
Monday, March 9, 2026
SAP-Enabled P2P Finance: Radical Financial Disintermediation and Capital Optimization in the 2026 Economy
In the complex and often perilous global financial ecosystem of 2026, the traditional banking intermediation model is facing an existential reckoning. For decades, the structural lag between risk inception and risk transfer has acted as a silent drain on global liquidity. As interest rates remain volatile and capital adequacy requirements tighten under evolving international standards, the "Risk Maturity Gap" has become the primary bottleneck for economic growth. The solution lies not in refining 20th-century banking mechanics, but in a fundamental architectural shift toward a decentralized, peer-to-peer (P2P) financial nexus powered by the world’s most dominant enterprise operating system: SAP.
By leveraging the fact that SAP systems manage approximately 70% of the world’s real-economy GDP, a new paradigm of financial disintermediation is emerging. This model moves away from the opaque and capital-intensive world of synthetic securitizations toward a transparent, direct association of assets and liabilities. This transition is not merely a technical upgrade; it is a strategic imperative for capital optimization in an era where information velocity is the only true defense against market systemic failure.
1. The Perils of Synthetic Securitization: A Fragile Foundation
Synthetic securitization was designed to allow banks to transfer credit risk without selling the underlying assets. By using credit derivatives or guarantees, financial institutions attempted to "unbundle" risk from their balance sheets. However, in the high-stakes environment of 2026, the inherent fragility of this model has been exposed. The complexity of these instruments often masks the true nature of the underlying collateral, creating a "transparency tax" that inflates the cost of capital.
The fundamental risk of synthetic structures lies in their reliance on counterparty performance and the subjective valuation of risk tranches. When the market experiences a sudden shock, these synthetic bridges often collapse, leaving the initiating bank holding the very risk it sought to offload. This opacity is the antithesis of the "Financial Twin" concept, where every ledger entry must be a perfect, verifiable reflection of a physical economic reality.
"Synthetic securitization remains a sophisticated veil that obscures the true location of risk, creating a systemic fragility that the modern enterprise can no longer afford to subsidize."
2. The Intermediation Lag: The Inevitable Consumption of Capital
The core problem intrinsic to the traditional banking model is the temporal gap between risk assumption and risk endorsement. When a bank originates a loan or a trade finance instrument, it assumes the full weight of that risk on its balance sheet. There is a significant time delay—often weeks or months—before that risk can be bundled, rated, and sold to investors. During this "Intermediation Lag," the bank must hold regulatory capital against the asset.
This consumption of capital is not an incidental cost; it is a structural inefficiency. It ties up billions in liquidity that could otherwise be deployed into the real economy. As long as the bank acts as a central clearinghouse for risk, the velocity of capital is restricted by the speed of the bank’s internal bureaucratic and regulatory processes. In the 2026 economy, where supply chains move at the speed of digital signals, this 20th-century financial latency has become a dangerous liability.
"Capital consumption is the inevitable tax on financial latency; as long as risk sits on a bank's balance sheet waiting for endorsement, the real economy remains starved of liquidity."
3. P2P Financial Disintermediation: Direct Asset-Liability Matching
The alternative to the intermediated model is a system of direct P2P financial disintermediation. In this framework, the enterprise acting as the "originator" of a financial need (an asset or a liability) is matched directly with the counterparty that possesses the corresponding surplus or appetite for that specific risk profile. By bypassing the traditional banking middleman, the "Intermediation Lag" is eliminated.
This model functions by associating assets and liabilities with the specific counterparties that need them in real-time. Because the risk is transferred at the moment of inception, the need for intermediary capital buffers is drastically reduced. This is the zenith of capital optimization: a system where capital flows directly from where it is held to where it is needed, guided by the granular data of the real economy rather than the abstract models of a commercial bank.
"Disintermediation is not the removal of trust, but the relocation of trust from an opaque institution to a transparent, data-driven peer-to-peer transaction."
4. SAP as the Global Economic Ledger: Powering the 70%
The primary challenge to any P2P financial model has always been scalability and trust. How can a direct matching system achieve the global reach of a tier-one bank? The answer lies in the dominant position of SAP. Currently, SAP manages the core business processes for the vast majority of the world’s largest corporations, accounting for over 70% of global GDP transactions.
SAP is the "Source of Truth" for the real economy. It knows the inventory levels, the purchase orders, the fulfillment rates, and the carbon footprints of the global supply chain. By utilizing SAP as the underlying architecture for P2P finance, the system gains immediate, unparalleled scale. The data required to validate an asset or a liability already exists within the ACDOCA tables and the Business Networks of the SAP ecosystem. SAP is not just an ERP; it is the infrastructure upon which a disintermediated financial world is being built.
"The scalability of P2P finance is guaranteed by the fact that the world’s economic DNA is already encoded within the SAP Universal Journal."
5. Capital Optimization through the Financial Twin
In a P2P environment, the "Financial Twin" becomes the ultimate instrument of capital optimization. Because SAP provides a real-time, valuated reflection of every physical move in the supply chain, the financial instruments derived from these moves are 100% accurate and verifiable. When an intercompany stock transfer is executed, the "Financial Twin" generates the corresponding financial obligation or asset instantly.
This accuracy allows for a "Zero-Lag" risk transfer. An investor can fund a specific shipment or a specific invoice with the total certainty that the underlying economic event is occurring exactly as recorded. This reduces the "Risk Premium" significantly, lowering the cost of capital for the enterprise and increasing the yield for the investor. In this nexus, capital is no longer a blunt instrument; it is a precision-guided resource.
"When the ledger breathes in unison with the warehouse, capital optimization shifts from a theoretical goal to an automated operational reality."
6. The Death of the Middleman: Reclaiming Economic Rent
Traditional banking intermediation extracts a significant amount of "economic rent" in the form of fees, spreads, and capital charges. In a disintermediated P2P finance model, this rent is reclaimed by the participants in the real economy. The enterprise gets cheaper funding, and the investor gets a direct, transparent asset class.
This shift represents a democratization of corporate finance. Smaller entities within the SAP ecosystem can access the same capital efficiency as multinational giants because their creditworthiness is proven by their operational data, not by a subjective bank rating. The SAP Digital Nexus levels the playing field, ensuring that capital is allocated based on the efficiency of the "Financial Twin" rather than the size of the balance sheet.
"The true promise of disintermediation is the return of economic value to those who actually create it: the producers, the movers, and the innovators of the real economy."
7. The 2026 Strategic Mandate: Efficiency as Survival
As we move deeper into 2026, the organizations that continue to rely on the slow, capital-hungry models of traditional banking will find themselves at a severe competitive disadvantage. The volatility of the current economic environment rewards those who can move capital with the same velocity as their digital data. P2P finance, enabled by the pervasive reach of SAP, is the only model capable of supporting this speed.
The mandate for the modern CFO is clear: optimize capital by eliminating intermediation. The tools are already in place within the S/4HANA environment. The Universal Journal, the Advanced Intercompany flows, and the Global Business Networks provide the foundation. All that remains is the strategic courage to bypass the traditional gatekeepers and embrace the direct, data-driven future of global finance.
"Survival in the 2026 economy is a function of information velocity; those who remain tethered to banking latency will be outpaced by those who operate at the speed of the digital nexus."
Conclusion: Defining the Future of Global Commerce
The transition from synthetic, intermediated risk models to a transparent, SAP-driven P2P financial architecture is the most significant evolution in corporate finance since the invention of double-entry bookkeeping. By matching assets and liabilities directly at the source of the real economy, we eliminate the unnecessary consumption of capital and the dangerous opacity of traditional banking.
The SAP Digital Nexus is the engine of this transformation. By managing 70% of the world’s GDP, SAP provides the scale, the data, and the trust required to make P2P finance the global standard. The organizations that master this disintermediated model will unlock levels of liquidity and agility that were previously unimaginable. We are no longer just managing businesses; we are architecting a new, optimized global economy.
"The future of finance is not found in the bank’s vault, but in the seamless, peer-to-peer flow of value across the SAP-enabled global network."
Connect and Stay Informed:
Join the Conversation: Connect with fellow professionals in the SAP Banking Group on LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/groups/92860/
Stay Updated: Subscribe to the SAP Banking Newsletter for the latest insights. https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/sap-banking-6893665983048081409/
Join my readers on Medium where I explore Capital Optimization in depth. Follow for actionable insights and fresh perspectives https://medium.com/@ferran.frances
Explore More: Visit the SAP Banking Blog for in-depth articles and analyses. https://sapbank.blogspot.com/
Connect Personally: Feel free to send a LinkedIn invitation; I’m always open to connecting with like-minded individuals. ferran.frances@gmail.com
I look forward to hearing your perspectives.
Kindest Regards,
Ferran Frances-Gil.
#FinancialTwin #SAP #S4HANA #UniversalJournal #CapitalOptimization #DigitalFinance #EnterpriseArchitecture #PredictiveAccounting #ContinuousClose #SAPBusinessNetwork #SupplyChainFinance #AssetCollaboration #RealTimeFinance #CFOAgenda #AutonomousEnterprise #GreenLedger #FerranFrances
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)