Report finds the sectors’ shared supply chain is the greatest risk, as attackers view wholesale and retail as an interconnected target landscape BOSTON, Jan. 21Report finds the sectors’ shared supply chain is the greatest risk, as attackers view wholesale and retail as an interconnected target landscape BOSTON, Jan. 21

Black Kite’s 2026 Wholesale & Retail Report Reveals Over 70% of Major Retailers, Nearly 60% of Wholesalers, and 52% of the Supply Chain Have Exposed Credentials

Report finds the sectors’ shared supply chain is the greatest risk, as attackers view wholesale and retail as an interconnected target landscape

BOSTON, Jan. 21, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Black Kite, the leader in third-party cyber risk management, today announced the release of its 2026 Wholesale & Retail Report: Cyber Exposure in the Age of Digital Supply Chain Attacks, which delves into the cyber risk for retail and wholesale companies that rely on many of the same essential vendors, including IT service providers, software platforms, and financial services. The report found a significant overlap in threat actors actively targeting these two sectors, confirming that they see wholesale and retail not as separate markets but rather as one large, interconnected system of targets.

“When we think about the supply chain, we often picture logistics and warehouses, but today the real threat is the expanded ecosystem,” said Ferhat Dikbiyik, Chief Research & Intelligence Officer, Black Kite. “The bottom line is that wholesale and retail’s greatest risk is their shared supply chain, and as we have seen time and time again, just one vulnerability in a common vendor can create systemic impact affecting both simultaneously. The era of checklist compliance is over. Third party risk management programs must evolve by securing the weak points across every partner in the ecosystem.”

The interconnectedness between wholesale and retail is aggressively exploited by threat actors that view the landscape as a single, lucrative target likely to pay out to minimize supply chain disruption. Additionally, with attackers seeing wholesale and retail as one target, they have developed universal attack tools and malware, such as Stealer Logs and MFT exploits, capable of working across both. Their goal is simply to find the easiest entry point into the system, regardless of which sector that entry point belongs to. For defenders, this tactic means their defense strategies must be unified. For instance, a successful breach into a wholesaler can create an easy entry point leveraged by the same group to be used against a major retailer that uses that particular wholesaler.

One of the report’s most critical findings is the widespread presence of compromised credentials, meaning that initial access has already been granted to a majority of the industry. In fact, over 70% of major retailers, nearly 60% of wholesalers, and 52% of the supply chain have exposed credentials.

Additional key findings include:

  • 17% of retail ransomware victims had revenue over $1B, demonstrating that threat actors prioritize ‘big game hunting’ in the retail sector – a specific target for high-value extortion.
  • 39% of wholesale ransomware victims had revenue in the mid-market range of $20M–$100M as attackers play a ‘volume game’ on smaller enterprises.
  • 42% of critical supply chain vendors are exposed to at least one vulnerability from the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog, listing flaws currently under active attack.
  • 2 vendor categories – Professional & Technical Services (793) and Information (705) –  totaling 1,498 companies, dominate the supply chain, outnumbering physical categories by a significant margin.

The report’s findings are conclusive. The shared supply chain is the new threat, and credential theft is the dominant access vector. In order to protect themselves, wholesalers, retailers and their vendors must urgently prioritize patching the specific vulnerabilities listed in the CISA KEV catalog, particularly those granting Remote Code Execution (RCE), which are the exact flaws active ransomware groups are weaponizing today.

Black Kite’s report empowers cybersecurity leaders and business executives to understand today’s emerging threats and learn how to proactively manage their third-party cyber risk to protect their organizations from supply chain disruptions.

To read the report, visit https://content.blackkite.com/ebook/wholesale-retail-tprm-report-2026/.

About Black Kite
Black Kite is the AI-native third-party cyber risk management platform trusted by over 3,000 customers to manage every supplier and every risk across their extended ecosystem. Powered by the industry’s highest-quality risk intelligence, spanning over 40 million companies, Black Kite is differentiated by the accuracy, transparency, and actionability of its data. The platform automates vendor monitoring and risk assessments, surfacing reliable insights into ransomware susceptibility, regulatory gaps, financial exposure, and more. With Black Kite, security and risk teams gain always-on visibility and trusted intelligence to act early, reduce exposure, and stay ahead of third-party threats. Black Kite has received numerous industry awards and recognition from customers. Learn more at www.blackkite.com, or on the Black Kite blog.

Media Contact:
Michelle Kearney
Hi-Touch PR
443-857-9468
kearney@hi-touchpr.com

Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/black-kites-2026-wholesale–retail-report-reveals-over-70-of-major-retailers-nearly-60-of-wholesalers-and-52-of-the-supply-chain-have-exposed-credentials-302661299.html

SOURCE Black Kite

Market Opportunity
Kite AI Logo
Kite AI Price(KITE)
$0.14144
$0.14144$0.14144
+1.46%
USD
Kite AI (KITE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

XRP Hits Record Transactions, But Price Struggles – What’s Next for the Crypto?

XRP Hits Record Transactions, But Price Struggles – What’s Next for the Crypto?

XRP Ledger hits record transactions but faces continued price struggle. Despite growth, XRP price declines as resistance levels hold strong. Record transaction
Share
Coinstats2026/02/01 21:02
Tom Lee: Crypto Market Under Short-Term Pressure, Long-Term Bull Market Still in Early Stages

Tom Lee: Crypto Market Under Short-Term Pressure, Long-Term Bull Market Still in Early Stages

PANews reported on February 1st that Tom Lee shared his 2026 market outlook during an appearance on the podcast "The Compound." Lee remains generally optimistic
Share
PANews2026/02/01 21:15
‘Alien Earth’ Composer Jeff Russo Dives Into Score For FX Series

‘Alien Earth’ Composer Jeff Russo Dives Into Score For FX Series

The post ‘Alien Earth’ Composer Jeff Russo Dives Into Score For FX Series appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. FX’s Alien: Earth — Pictured: Timothy Olyphant as Kirsh. Courtesy of Patrick Brown/FX The following contains certain spoilers for Alien: Earth! When it came time to marry picture and music for FX’s Alien: Earth, series creator Noah Hawley did what he’s done for close to 20 years: call up Jeff Russo. “[He] said, ‘I’m adapting the Alien IP, for television. What do you think, musically?’” Russo recalls over Zoom. “We started talking and I began writing music for it. It seemed like…not a foregone conclusion, but a conversation that was being had.” A founder of Tonic and a previous member of Low Stars, the composer has scored all of Hawley’s film and television projects since The Unusuals (2009). “Everything I’ve learned about making music for storytelling, I learned by doing with him,” Russo adds. “He really knows what he wants. And when you have a confident filmmaker that is also open to artistic collaboration, it’s the best of all the worlds.” The first small screen translation of the nearly 50-year-old franchise known for straddling horror, sci-fi, and action genres, Alien: Earth takes place two years before the events of the 1979 original and nearly six decades before Aliens. “We talk a lot about trying to figure out what the underlying property is making our audience feel,” Russo explains. “Trying to create a unique narrative and way of telling the story, but at the same time, making the audience feel that same feeling. In this case, there’s that feeling of dread. There’s that tense, eerie feeling created with such a deft hand in Alien. And then [came Aliens, which was] such a great action piece. So how are we going to take those two ideas and sort of mix them together, have that be something unique and different, while eliciting the…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:23