Reclassifying Risks Using Porter’s 5 Forces & Competitive Advantage


We align risks with each of Porter’s five forces and add internal business capabilities and external uncontrollables to reflect the full landscape. Each risk is tagged as:

  • Controllable by Business Owner
  • Structurable by Banker
  • Uncontrollable (Monitored Only)

If we use first principles grounded in Michael Porter’s Five Forces and competitive advantage theory, we can reclassify risks based not just on surface symptoms (e.g., “FX risk”) but based on the structural drivers of profitability and control.


1. Threat of New Entrants

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Low barriers to entryPartial (brand, IP, scale)NoCompetitive moat strength matters. Weak moat is a structural risk.
Rapid innovation pacePartial (R&D, agility)NoMust evaluate how nimble the company is to defend its turf.
Capital intensity to scaleYesYes (bank can influence via financing structure)Financing capital investments may support barriers.

2. Bargaining Power of Suppliers

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Concentrated key suppliersPartial (diversification)NoRisk of price hikes or disruptions. Banker can’t fix this.
Vertical integration by suppliersNoNoIndustry-wide structural risk, must monitor only.

3. Bargaining Power of Buyers

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Customer concentrationYesYes (loan structuring, covenants)Track customer churn, industry cycles.
Pricing pressure from buyersPartial (value proposition)NoKey risk for commoditized industries.

4. Threat of Substitutes

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Product commoditizationPartial (branding, IP)NoCompetitive advantage based on differentiation matters here.
Tech-driven disruptionPartial (investing in future)NoImportant to evaluate responsiveness, not mitigation claims.

5. Industry Rivalry

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Margin compressionPartial (efficiency, pricing power)NoSustainable cost advantage or differentiation is key.
Price wars or overcapacityNoNoPurely structural; only scenario planning applies.

6. Internal Capabilities (Competitive Advantage)

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Poor management or governanceYesPartial (covenants, board representation)Often claimed “mitigated,” but must assess depth of team.
Lack of scale or scopeYesYes (finance scaling, M&A support)Scale can create cost advantage or network effects.
Operational inefficiencyYesNoCompare peers, benchmark KPIs.
Weak digital capabilitiesYesNoKey vulnerability in modern sectors.

7. External Uncontrollables

RiskControl by BusinessBank Structuring?Commentary
Macroeconomic recessionNoNoOnly resilience can be evaluated.
FX / commodity volatilityPartial (hedging)Yes (structure, hedging solutions)Control is imperfect, even with hedging.
Regulatory/political riskNoNoBest addressed via diversification of jurisdictions.
Climate events or pandemicsNoNoContingency planning is critical, not “mitigation.”

How to Use This

You can use this framework to:

  • Diagnose risks structurally (not just list them)
  • Anchor mitigation strategies to actual leverage — i.e., is it a moat, or a wish?
  • Train bankers and credit approvers to stop greenlighting weak mitigation narratives

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