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Circular Economy Models Can Improve Supply Chain Resilience

Liqian Ma Head of Sustainable & Impact Investing Research

JP Gibbons Senior Investment Director, Sustainable & Impact Investing
Circular Economy Models Can Improve Supply Chain Resilience

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The circular economy is becoming an increasingly mission-critical business strategy in a more volatile world. Tariffs, shipping choke points, persistent inflation, and AI-led growth are exposing the weakness of linear supply chains. Regenerating value through reuse and recycling in circular models offers particular appeal: greater supply security, more stable input costs, and lower exposure to geopolitical and commodity shocks. The circular economy may create advantages for proactive investors by mitigating operational risks and finding opportunities in value-enhancing recycling businesses.

Tariffs are one reason the economics are shifting. When duties raise the cost of virgin steel, aluminum, or plastics, the reuse of materials becomes more competitive. Recycling, remanufacturing, and recovery can reduce reliance on imported goods that may be disrupted by trade disputes, export controls, or freight bottlenecks.

AI is increasing demand for critical minerals and rare earth elements used in the infrastructure that powers data centers. Companies that build circular systems through recovery of end-of-life batteries, electronics, and industrial equipment can reduce sourcing inputs from geographically concentrated and politically sensitive regions. This lowers exposure to external shocks and improves long-term supply resilience. Additionally, waste-to-energy systems are finding new demand with the growth in site-specific energy needs.

Plastic offers one of the clearest near-term business cases. Virgin plastic production is tied to fossil fuel feedstocks with oil price spikes quickly flowing into resin costs. Recycled plastic is not immune to volatility, but it is less dependent on virgin hydrocarbon extraction, which makes recycled content supply chains economically more attractive in times of oil price volatility.

The broader inflationary environment adds to the investment case. Newly extracted inputs are significantly exposed to inflation in energy, transport, labor, and trade. Using recycled inputs, extending product life, and recovering components can function as direct margin protection when prices rise.

Regulation is reinforcing the economic opportunity within the circular economy, and recycled content mandates are creating demand floors for secondary materials.

That number will rise incrementally to 60% by 2028. The EU’s packaging rules are also tightening recycled content requirements. With regulatory compliance for recycled content increasing in a growing number of jurisdictions, a first-mover advantage is emerging for companies that secure feedstock.

Translating the circular economy investment thesis into portfolio action requires a deliberate approach across asset classes. Many institutional portfolios already have meaningful exposure to sectors where circularity is becoming a competitive differentiator, including industrials, materials, consumer staples, technology hardware, and logistics. Investors should better understand how managers are evaluating companies’ waste reduction and reuse strategies. Companies genuinely innovating on circularity—rather than merely reporting on it—may exhibit lower input cost sensitivity and more durable margins over time. Private equity and growth equity managers with dedicated circularity mandates offer access to advanced recycling platforms and the software systems that make reverse supply chains commercially competitive. Real assets managers with operational expertise in supply chain logistics are well positioned to develop and own the physical infrastructure required to support circularity at scale.

Circularity is increasingly competing on price, resilience, and operational relevance. In a more disrupted world, the circular economy is becoming a more practical business and investment consideration.

 


Liqian Ma - Liqian Ma is Head of Sustainable & Impact Investing Research and a Partner at Cambridge Associates.

JP Gibbons - JP Gibbons is a Senior Director for the Sustainable & Impact Investing Team at Cambridge Associates.

 


About Cambridge Associates

Cambridge Associates is a global investment firm with 50+ years of institutional investing experience. The firm aims to help pension plans, endowments & foundations, healthcare systems, and private clients achieve their investment goals and maximize their impact on the world. Cambridge Associates delivers a range of services, including outsourced CIO, non-discretionary portfolio management, staff extension and alternative asset class mandates. Contact us today.

 

 

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