Decoding The Black Swan -Event on The Supply Chain - Liladhar Pasoo The term “Black Swan” was coined by renowned finance professor Nassim Nicholas Taleb in his 2007 book “The Black Swan ''. He defines black swan-events that are impossible to foretell due to their extreme rarity yet having disastrous after effects. He advocates that it is important for people to always assume a black swan-event is a possibility, whatever it may be, and to plan accordingly. Countries of advanced industrial economies and their technologically advanced companies are linked by globalized customers and supply networks together with finely honed transport strategies that deliver JIT(Just-in-time).Normally, the existing system functions very effectively. Unfortunately, the system is also susceptible to events that are either not forecast-able or is able to forecast but not able to prevent it. The usual planning models and forecasting do not seem to or cannot capture disruptive black swan-event. The Challenge is how do we plan, factor and mitigate the black swan-event damage? One aspect of globalization has been the rise of Asia, as a manufacturing hub for supplying western markets. Indeed, since the 1980s, awareness of the potential for value creation by use of low-cost Asian suppliers has resulted in growth of high traffic while encountering different dynamics phased across the supply chain . Supply systems increasingly demand effective forecasting, accurate and reliable logistics, and very flexible production models to ensure goods are available when and where needed and more importantly swift response to service the demand of the market or demographic. Adoption of Just-In-Time (so-called JIT) quality and supplier partnership philosophy for value creation also benefited both suppliers and buyers and further increased trades but usually these are best for stable conditions. Analysis of the full cost of a black swan-event whose likelihood can only be an estimate but whose outcome is so severe and so difficult that it calls for strategically bold and leveraged action. The company must gauge the impact of such black swan- event and try to built-up a cost to shield itself from such a business crisis. It has to work-out cost benefit analysis before such cost factoring is incorporated into business strategy.