Key Takeaways
- AI makes procurement decisions faster. It does not make them better. A negotiation algorithm working from stale market data negotiates faster toward the wrong outcome – and speed makes that worse, not better.
- CFOs do not want faster processing or automated workflows. They want earlier, more reliable visibility into where commodity costs are heading – so budget assumptions hold before the numbers move, not after they already have.
- The moment procurement’s relationship with finance actually shifts is not a platform update. It is when procurement walks into the room with a view on where the market is going before anyone else has thought to ask the question.
- The intelligence underneath the automation is what determines whether technology investment delivers anything. Platforms amplify what procurement already knows. If the market data feeding those decisions is incomplete or delayed, the platform does not solve the problem – it accelerates it.
- The transition worth making is not from manual to automated. It is from reactive to anticipatory: arriving at supplier conversations with independent data, testing budget assumptions against credible analysis before they are set, and briefing finance on market direction as it develops rather than explaining variances after the fact.
Every Chief Procurement Officer (CPO) wants to make the transition from cost centre to strategic partner. Most are being told AI is the way to get there. The ones who have already made it know something different:
AI without intelligence is just faster noise.
That is the uncomfortable truth sitting underneath the current wave of procurement technology investment. Autonomous negotiations. Spend analytics platforms. AI-driven supplier risk management. The promise is consistent: implement the right technology and your function transforms from cost centre to strategic business partner.
But there is a question this narrative never quite answers: What is the intelligence layer underneath the automation?
What is your CFO looking for?
Not faster processing. Not automated workflows.
Earlier, more reliable visibility into what commodity costs could do, so that budget assumptions hold, pricing decisions are made with confidence, and the business is not perpetually revising plans that were already out of date when they were set.
Senior procurement leaders are consistent on what changes the relationship with finance. It is not a platform update or a new reporting structure. It is the moment procurement walks into the room with an informed view of the market, before the numbers have moved, and frames the business response before anyone else has framed the question.
Atlantic Grupa, one of the leading food companies in the Adriatic region, describes exactly this outcome: access to market intelligence helped align procurement across the business and streamline the budgeting process, shifting the function from a reactive cost centre into a credible contributor to financial planning.
When procurement and finance are operating with the same market intelligence, the dynamic between them changes entirely. Procurement stops being the function that delivers difficult news and becomes the one that saw it developing.
That is what strategic partnership looks like from a Chief Financial Officer’s (CFO) perspective. It does not require a single AI implementation to get there.
Expana Platform – Price projections and directional trend indicators across commodity categories, an intelligence layer to support budget planning and internal alignment.
AI without intelligence is just faster noise
AI makes decisions faster. It does not make them better.
A negotiation algorithm working from stale market data negotiates faster toward the wrong outcome. A spend analytics platform built on historical actuals optimises for a market that no longer exists.
The technology is only as strategic as the intelligence it operates from. If the market data feeding those decisions is incomplete, delayed, or directionally wrong, speed makes the problem worse. Not better.
One procurement team timed ingredient purchases so precisely that a key account manager from a major supplier called them to ask how they were doing it. The answer was not a new AI platform. It was earlier, more reliable market intelligence, forecast data that helped the team assess where prices could be heading ahead of market moves. The technology they had before that intelligence was in place had not changed. What changed was what it was working from.
The difference between a forecast that tracks the market and one that anticipates it is not a feature upgrade. It is the gap between reacting and deciding.
Traditional Approach – Wide range, no directional signal. The market is tracked, not anticipated.
Expana Forecast – Five inflection points. Directional projections at 3, 6, 12 and 18 months. Historical statistical similarity: 89.40%. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
The question for every CPO evaluating technology investment right now is not whether to adopt AI. It is what intelligence infrastructure needs to be in place for that investment to deliver what it promises.
Technology amplifies what you already have.
The CPOs who have genuinely made the transition from cost centre to strategic partner did not do it by implementing a platform. They did it by changing what their function knew, and when they knew it.
They walked into conversations with finance and leadership carrying something procurement had rarely brought before: a credible, evidence-based view of where markets could be heading. Built from stacked evidence across market fundamentals, pricing models, and expert interpretation.
Not where a market is today. Where it could go.
That changed the budget conversation. The team was no longer explaining variances, it was anticipating them. It changed the supplier conversation. They were no longer responding to cost pressure claims, they were arriving with independent data that validated or challenged them. And it changed how the function was perceived internally. The people around the table could see that procurement understood something about the market that they did not.
‘’The forecasting feature has become an integral part of the way we work. We believe it’s needed in all strategic procurement functions. They provided the data, insight, and forecasting that delivered accurate, reliable and repeatable results that revolutionised the way the business conducted planning and responded to change.’’ Head of Global Strategic Procurement, Beumer Group
Expana Platform – Real-time trend change notification, a signal to help procurement move from reacting to anticipating.
The transition worth making
Not from manual to automated. From reactive to anticipatory.
The functions that have made this shift arrive at supplier conversations with independent market data, not data that came from the supplier. Their budget assumptions are tested against credible analysis before they are set, not revised against reality after they are missed. They brief finance on market direction as it develops, so the first conversation about a cost move is about response, not accountability.
Technology can support all of these practices. But the practices come first. The intelligence that makes them possible comes before the technology that accelerates them.
Expana’s commodity price forecasts draw on market fundamentals, pricing models, and expert interpretation across 2,000 agrifood commodities giving procurement teams the forward-looking context to inform internal conversations, support budget decisions, and anticipate potential market shifts.
See how Expana forecasts work: www.expanamarkets.com/forecasts
The seat at the table is not given to the function with the best platform. It goes to the one that anticipated what could be coming and communicated it with confidence.
This commentary is prepared by Expana and its group of companies, neither of which is an investment firm. We have no positions in the commodities or derivatives referenced. The views expressed are for information only. See our disclaimer for more information: https://www.expanamarkets.com/disclaimer/
FAQs
How does better market intelligence change supplier negotiations?
It removes the information asymmetry. Suppliers arrive at negotiations with their own view of market conditions. Procurement teams without independent data are effectively negotiating against that framing. Teams with credible, forward-looking commodity forecasts can validate or challenge cost pressure claims with their own evidence rather than accepting the supplier’s narrative.
When should procurement be briefing finance on commodity markets?
Before the numbers move. The functions that have the strongest relationships with finance are the ones that show up with an informed view of where costs could be heading, not the ones that explain why the budget missed after the fact. The first conversation about a cost move should be about how to respond, not about who is accountable.
Does procurement need AI to become a strategic partner?
No. The case studies that illustrate this transition – Atlantic Grupa, Beumer Group – point to market intelligence as the turning point, not a specific technology implementation. AI can support and accelerate good procurement practice, but the intelligence infrastructure needs to come first. Technology amplifies what you already have. If what you have is incomplete or reactive, the technology reflects that.
Written by Said Sahardeed