- Litigation is surfacing as an early indicator of operational stress across South African industries, often exposing weaknesses in contracts, governance and internal controls before financial distress becomes visible.
- Structural disputes linked to payment defaults, supply chain failures and contract breakdowns are replacing headline driven legal battles, signalling deeper systemic pressure.
- Proactive legal risk management in 2026 will be critical for businesses seeking to strengthen resilience and avoid costly, reactive litigation.
Litigation is fast becoming one of the earliest indicators of business instability in South Africa, revealing operational strain long before it appears in formal financial reporting.
Across multiple sectors, commercial disputes are increasingly functioning as a diagnostic tool for assessing organisational resilience, exposing vulnerabilities that might otherwise remain hidden until they escalate.
According to Ann-Suhet Marx, Director and Head of Litigation at VDM Incorporated, the disputes reaching her desk today are less about dramatic corporate conflict and more about systems under sustained pressure. She explains that litigation now frequently highlights where commercial structures are no longer aligned with current economic realities.
“Litigation has become a stress test because it exposes where contracts, processes, relationships, and internal controls are no longer holding up under pressure,” Marx says. “These matters often surface before any formal signs of distress appear. South African businesses are operating in an environment where economic volatility, shifting supply chains, and tightening credit conditions are placing constant pressure on operational resilience.”
The changing nature of commercial disputes
Over the past 18 months, Marx has observed a notable shift in the matters escalating into litigation. The disputes are rarely sensational. Instead, they tend to be structural, emerging when operational capacity is stretched, and long-standing agreements become difficult to sustain.
“These aren’t headline-grabbing battles,” she notes. “They’re structural disputes that emerge when operational capacity is stretched, when obligations can’t be met, and when long-standing agreements are suddenly unworkable.”
When litigation is instituted, it often exposes governance gaps, outdated internal controls, or commercial relationships that can no longer absorb economic strain. Recurring patterns include contract breakdowns, rising payment defaults, supply chain disputes driven by delivery failures and quality concerns, and urgent interdicts aimed at containing escalating commercial risk.
How operational stress manifests in practice
In one recent matter, a medium-sized supplier operating under a long-term service agreement was unable to meet its obligations after input costs increased sharply. What initially began as a request for renegotiation developed into a fully fledged commercial dispute.
“The contract wasn’t designed to accommodate the economic conditions businesses are facing in South Africa today,” Marx explains. “What began as a request for renegotiation escalated into a full commercial dispute.”
In another case, a national distributor fell behind on payments due to cash flow pressure. Creditors, themselves facing financial strain, acted swiftly to protect their positions.
“Their creditors, who were also under strain, acted almost immediately. Within weeks, what could have been resolved informally became a multi-party legal battle,” she says.
Supply chain vulnerabilities have also become increasingly visible. A manufacturer experienced production stoppages after an overseas supplier failed to deliver critical components on time. The delay triggered penalties under downstream agreements and required urgent legal intervention to mitigate losses.
“Operational strain at one point in the chain created exposure across the company’s entire network, a clear example of how pressure increases risk,” Marx observes. “Together, these cases illustrate how operational stress is now manifesting first in legal disputes rather than in financial statements.”
The importance of proactive risk management in 2026
Marx emphasises that many disputes reaching litigation could have been avoided or contained earlier through proactive intervention and structured risk assessment.
“Waiting until a dispute becomes unmanageable is the most expensive approach a business can take. Early engagement is a far wiser legal and financial strategy,” she says.
She advises companies to reassess long-term contracts to ensure adaptability, review payment terms and credit exposure, identify single-point vulnerabilities within supply chains, and strengthen procurement processes, approval systems and internal controls.
“A proactive review of these areas is not only one of the most effective ways to reduce legal and financial risk, but also an important diagnostic tool,” she adds.
Outlook for 2026
Looking ahead, Marx expects the litigation landscape to mirror the increasing complexity of operating in a high-pressure commercial environment. She anticipates a rise in cross-border disputes as companies diversify suppliers, more urgent court applications aimed at containing spiralling operational risk, an increase in contract renegotiations driven by economic volatility, and a growing number of disputes linked to digital transformation challenges, including system failures and cybersecurity incidents.
“As pressure intensifies, the legal system becomes one of the first places where structural weaknesses surface, so businesses that take a proactive approach in 2026 will be far better positioned to navigate the year ahead,” she concludes.
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