Total Cost of Security (TCS)™

A Boardroom Framework for Quantifying the Economics of Security

Most procurement metrics measure cost, inventory, coverage, or market exposure independently.

TCS™ measures something different:

The economic value of security itself.

The framework enables executives to quantify, communicate, and defend security-of-supply decisions using a common financial language.

Why Traditional Metrics Fall Short

Procurement teams traditionally rely on a combination of:

  • Coverage (%)
  • Inventory Buffers
  • WACA
  • Market Pricing
  • VaR
  • Supplier Diversity

Each metric provides useful information.

However, none answer the question:

What is the economic value of our security strategy?

This creates a disconnect between procurement, operations, treasury, and the board.

The TCS Framework Solves The Problem

The Traditional Discussion

Fuel Manager:

We need 24 months inventory.

CFO:

Why not 12?

Fuel Manager:

Security.

Not a satisfying answer.

The TCS Discussion

Fuel Manager:

At current market conditions:

  • Contract hedge benefit = $22 million
  • Inventory carrying cost = $5 million
  • Net security value = $17 million

Now the discussion becomes quantitative.

That is powerful.

The strongest aspect of TCS is not that it measures fuel cost.

It measures the economics of security itself.

That is a conversation fuel managers have been trying to have with CFOs for decades.

THE TCS FRAMEWORK

The Four Building Blocks

Cost of Security


TCS™

Measures the annual cost of maintaining contractual and physical supply security.

Contract Security Premium
+
Physical Security Cost
=
Total Cost of Security

Value of Security

Security Value Delivered (SVD)

Measures the current market value created by historical procurement decisions.

Current Spot Price
vs
Portfolio WACA

Net Benefit

Net Security Position (NSP)

Measures the net economic benefit generated by the security strategy.

Security Value Delivered
-
Total Cost of Security
=
NSP

Efficiency

Security Efficiency Ratio (SER)

Measures how effectively security spending generates value.

Security Value Delivered
÷
Total Cost of Security
=
SER

Boardroom Shield™

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Translating Security Into Financial Outcomes

  • Inventory Levels
  • Contract Coverage
  • Supplier Capacity
  • Market Pricing

TCS™ reframes the discussion.

Instead of asking:

Why are we carrying inventory and paying above Spot?

Executives can ask:

What economic value does our security strategy create?

The result is a common language that aligns:

Procurement

Operations

Risk

Treasury

Executive Leadership

around a single financial framework.

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WHAT QUESTIONS DOES TCS™ ANSWER?

What value did our historical strategy create?

Answered by:

Security Value Delivered (SVD)

What does security cost us today?

Answered by:

Total Cost of Security (TCS)

Is security worth paying for?

Answered by:

Net Security Position (NSP)

and

Security Efficiency Ratio (SER)

    WHERE CAN TCS™ BE APPLIED?

    • Fuel Security Strategy

      Evaluate inventory policy, contract structures, and security premiums.

    • Strategic Sourcing

      Compare alternative supply strategies using a common financial framework.

    • Board Reporting

      Translate procurement decisions into defendable economic outcomes.

    • Accelerated

      Stress-test security economics across alternative market conditions.

    Current application:

    Uranium Procurement Strategy

    TCS™ is currently deployed through the Uranium Procurement Strategy ecosystem, supporting:

    • Executive Toolkit™
    • TCS Engine™
    • Strategic Advisory

    for nuclear utilities operating in increasingly constrained supply environments.

    WHAT'S NEXT

    Explore TCS™ Solutions

    Solution

    Executive Toolkit™

    TCS Engine™

    Strategic Advisory

    Purpose

    Understand your current security position

    Evaluate alternative security strategies

    Validate critical procurement decisions

    Start measuring the economics of your security.

    Get in touch to get started

    Let's Talk!