Mission Grey Daily Brief - January 21, 2025
Summary of the Global Situation for Businesses and Investors
The inauguration of Donald Trump as the 47th President of the United States has sent shockwaves across the globe. Trump's controversial policies and aggressive rhetoric have raised concerns among allies and adversaries alike. As Trump takes office, the world braces for potential geopolitical shifts and uncertainty looms.
Trump's Return to the White House
The inauguration of Donald Trump as the 47th President of the United States has sparked global reactions, ranging from optimism to apprehension. Trump's assertive foreign policy agenda, including his pledge to end the war in Ukraine, has captured international attention. However, mixed signals from his administration and past remarks have raised concerns about the direction of his presidency.
Russia-Ukraine War and NATO Tensions
The Russia-Ukraine war continues to dominate global headlines, with Trump's pledge to broker a peace deal raising hopes and skepticism. Vladimir Putin has expressed willingness to engage in discussions, but peace remains elusive. Russia's rapid rearmament and potential NATO attack heighten tensions, posing risks to regional stability.
Trump's Trade Policies and Global Impact
Trump's trade policies, including proposed tariffs and elimination of subsidies, threaten to disrupt global supply chains and impact economies worldwide. Norway's seafood exporters, for instance, face uncertainty as Trump's presidency could lead to trade barriers.
Turkey's Role in Regional Diplomacy
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has expressed optimism about U.S.-Türkiye relations under Trump's presidency. Erdoğan's remarks on Türkiye's mediation efforts in the Russia-Ukraine war and commitment to aiding Slovakia with natural gas supplies underscore Türkiye's regional influence.
In conclusion, the Trump presidency has set the stage for a tumultuous global landscape. As world leaders navigate this new era, businesses and investors must closely monitor geopolitical developments to mitigate risks and seize opportunities.
Further Reading:
Editorial: Trump’s ‘America First’ agenda brings opportunities for South Korea - 조선일보
Erdoğan welcomes Trump’s re-election with optimism - Hurriyet Daily News
Norway's seafood exporters on edge as Trump arrives in White House - IntraFish
Russia rearming faster than thought ‘for possible attack on Nato’ - Yahoo! Voices
Russia's Putin congratulates Donald Trump as he takes office for the second time - Euronews
Steve Bannon warns of world conflict that could be 'Trump's Vietnam' - Fox News
Trump Again Vows To End Ukraine War, Warns Taliban On Weapons - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Turkey’s Erdogan to discuss Russian gas supplies to Slovakia with Putin - Al-Monitor
Ukraine war latest: Putin suffers record losses as Kyiv warns Trump - The Independent
Themes around the World:
Defense Industrial Mobilization
France plans major rearmament, including up to 400% higher drone and missile stocks by 2030 and €8.5 billion for munitions. This supports aerospace and defense suppliers, but may redirect fiscal resources, industrial capacity, and regulatory priorities toward strategic sectors.
Gas Tax Policy Uncertainty
The government is weighing windfall taxes or PRRT reforms as LNG prices surge, after Treasury modelling of new levy options. Policy changes could materially affect returns in a sector that exported about A$65 billion of LNG in the year to June 2025.
Energy Export Capacity Drives Strategy
Canada is expanding its role as a strategic energy supplier, shipping about 8 billion cubic feet of gas daily to the U.S. while debating new west coast and southbound pipelines. Export infrastructure choices will shape energy investment, logistics routes, pricing power and long-term market diversification.
Supply Chains Face Geopolitical Stress
German companies report rising concern over geopolitical disruptions, shipping costs, and payment risk as Middle East conflict affects energy and freight corridors. Nearly half of exporters expect weaker payment discipline, increasing working-capital strain and supply-chain contingency requirements across sectors.
Power investment needs surge
India’s power system is projected to expand from about 520 GW to 1,121 GW by 2035-36, requiring roughly $2.2 trillion in investment. This creates major opportunities in generation, grids, and storage, but also raises execution, financing, and regulatory risks for businesses.
Customs Reform and Border Friction
Mexico’s 2026 customs reform has increased documentation requirements, strict liability for customs agents and seizure risks, drawing criticism from U.S. trade officials. For importers and exporters, the result is higher compliance costs, slower clearance and greater exposure to shipment delays across ports, factories and cross-border manufacturing networks.
Internal Trade Barrier Reduction
Federal and provincial governments are moving to expand mutual recognition for goods and, potentially, services across Canada. If implemented effectively from June 2026, reforms could reduce duplicative rules, improve labor mobility, lower compliance costs, and partially offset external trade volatility for domestic operators.
Labor Shortages Constrain Business Capacity
Wartime conditions continue to tighten labor availability, especially for industry and reconstruction. Businesses face shortages in skilled workers, forcing greater investment in re-skilling, productivity upgrades and automation, while raising execution risk for manufacturers, logistics operators, and international project developers.
Labour Supply and Skills Gaps
Persistent labour shortages, especially in construction, IT, healthcare, and advanced industry, continue to constrain output and raise operating costs. Skills mismatches and post-Brexit supply tightening are increasing wage pressure, delaying delivery timelines, and complicating expansion strategies for employers.
EU Integration Regulatory Shift
Ukraine is under pressure to pass EU-linked legislation covering energy markets, railways, civil service, and judicial enforcement to unlock up to €4 billion. Progressive alignment with EU standards should improve transparency and market access, but also raises compliance requirements for companies entering early.
US-China Trade Frictions Deepen
US-China tensions remain a central business risk as Washington expands Section 301 probes, export controls, and investment restrictions, while Beijing has opened six-month counter-investigations. The dispute threatens renewed retaliation, compliance burdens, and further supply-chain diversification away from China-linked exposure.
Tax and Compliance Burdens Rise
From April 2026, businesses face wider digital tax reporting, higher dividend tax rates, changed business-property relief, and new business-rates structures. Compliance costs will rise, especially for SMEs and owner-managed firms, affecting cash flow, succession planning, investment timing and corporate structuring.
Conditional Tech Trade Reopening
Nvidia’s restart of H200 production for approved Chinese customers shows limited reopening within strict controls, even as top-end chips remain banned. This creates uneven market access, volatile procurement cycles and planning uncertainty for AI, data-center and industrial automation investors.
Tax And Labor Costs Rising
From April 2026, businesses face higher minimum wages, dividend tax increases, Making Tax Digital expansion and revised business-rate multipliers. These changes raise payroll, compliance and profit-extraction costs, especially for SMEs, affecting hiring, operating margins and UK investment calculations.
Energy Shock Hits Costs
Middle East conflict is pushing up oil and LNG prices, lifting Thailand’s power tariff to 3.95 baht per kWh and raising freight costs. Higher fuel and utility bills are squeezing manufacturers, exporters, transport operators, and margin-sensitive supply chains.
Delayed Gaza reconstruction pipeline
A proposed eight-month Hamas disarmament process has become the gatekeeper for Gaza reconstruction. With $7 billion reportedly pledged but implementation delayed, construction, engineering, aid logistics, and cross-border commercial opportunities remain frozen and highly contingent on security compliance.
Renewables And Power Transition Recalibration
Taiwan is expanding offshore wind, offering 3.6 GW in a new auction, while reconsidering nuclear restarts to support AI-driven electricity demand. This shifting energy mix creates opportunities in infrastructure and clean power, but regulatory uncertainty complicates long-term industrial planning.
Fiscal Consolidation and Budget Risk
France cut its 2025 public deficit to 5.1% of GDP from 5.8%, but debt still stands at 115.6%. Tight 2026 budgeting, offsetting any new spending with cuts elsewhere, could reshape taxes, subsidies, procurement and public investment conditions.
Foreign Investment Realignment Pressure
Capital flows are being reshaped by geopolitics, with China now increasingly a net overseas investor as inbound foreign investment weakens. Businesses face a more selective investment climate, greater scrutiny of foreign firms, and rising pressure to diversify manufacturing, treasury, and partnership structures beyond China.
Election Outcome and Policy Reset
April’s election could produce Hungary’s sharpest policy turn in 16 years. A Tisza victory would likely prioritise anti-corruption reforms, closer EU alignment and unlocking roughly €18-20 billion in frozen EU funds, materially affecting investment confidence, public procurement and market access.
AI Growth and Data Centres
The government’s AI-led growth agenda is supporting data-centre and digital investment, including proposed AI Growth Zones. However, planning delays, grid access, funding constraints, and clean-energy availability remain key execution risks for technology investors and commercial real-estate operators.
Energy Cost Shock Intensifies
UK businesses remain exposed to severe energy-price volatility, worsened by Middle East disruption. Forecasts suggest electricity costs could rise 10%-30% and gas 25%-80%, squeezing margins, disrupting contract planning, weakening manufacturing competitiveness and complicating site-selection decisions for energy-intensive investors.
China Dependence Rebalancing Dilemma
Germany continues balancing de-risking rhetoric with deep commercial exposure to China, illustrated by major corporate commitments such as BASF’s €8.7 billion Guangdong complex. For multinationals, this creates strategic tension around market access, technology exposure, resilience, and future regulatory scrutiny.
US Tariff Volatility Risk
Shifting U.S. tariff policy remains India’s biggest external trade variable. A February framework would cut tariffs to 18%, yet Washington’s temporary 10% surcharge and legal uncertainty keep exporters in textiles, engineering, chemicals, and technology exposed to pricing and planning risk.
Helium and LNG Disruptions
Qatar supply shocks are straining LNG and helium availability, both critical to Korean industry. Qatar provides about 14.9% of Korea’s LNG imports and around 65% of helium imports, creating risks for electricity pricing, semiconductor fabrication, and advanced manufacturing continuity.
Lira Volatility and Tightening
Turkey’s lira remains under heavy pressure near 44 per dollar as inflation stayed around 31.5% and policy rates were held at 37%, with funding costs pushed toward 40%. Currency instability raises import costs, hedging expenses, financing risk, and pricing uncertainty for foreign investors.
Security and Water Stress Risks
Operational risk is elevated by insecurity and resource stress. The OECD estimates insecurity reduces potential growth by 1–2 percentage points annually, while worsening water scarcity and leakage losses of up to 46% threaten manufacturing continuity, site selection and logistics reliability in key industrial regions.
U.S. tariff uncertainty exposure
Costa Rica’s heavy dependence on the U.S., which absorbed 47% of exports in 2025, leaves exporters exposed to renewed tariff swings. Despite 14% export growth, sectors including metals, wood and agriculture weakened, sustaining pricing, compliance and market-diversification risks.
Industrial Policy Reshoring Frictions
Reshoring remains strategically favored, yet tariffs on machinery, steel, and components are raising capital costs for US manufacturers. Industry groups warn domestic capacity is insufficient in key equipment categories, so aggressive protection may delay investment, weaken competitiveness, and disrupt localization timelines.
Logistics Bottlenecks Raise Trade Costs
Persistent weakness at ports and rail is the most immediate business constraint. Durban, Cape Town and Ngqura rank 391st, 398th and 404th of 405 ports globally, while Transnet failures raise lead times, freight costs, inventory risk and export unreliability.
Rising Business Cost Burden
Companies are confronting higher wage, transport, energy and compliance costs alongside softer demand. Services PMI fell to 50.3 and export sales declined, signalling margin pressure across sectors and forcing firms to reassess hiring, pricing, footprint decisions and near-term expansion plans.
Operational Risk Extends Into Shipping
The maritime environment around Russian trade is becoming more hazardous, with vessel seizures, convoy rerouting, suspected sabotage, and infrastructure security concerns. Businesses face longer routes around northern Europe, greater spill and compliance risks, and higher exposure across shipping and port operations.
UK-EU Reset and Alignment
London is pursuing a summer reset with Brussels covering food standards, electricity, emissions trading, and wider regulatory alignment. A deal could lower border frictions and support exports, but disputes over youth mobility and tuition fees still create uncertainty for cross-border planning.
Energy System Reconstruction Imperative
Ukraine says it needs about $91 billion over ten years to rebuild its damaged energy system, while attacks continue to disrupt supply. Businesses face power insecurity, but investors see major openings in storage, renewables, gas generation and decentralized grids.
Market Governance and Capital Outflows
Warnings over stock-market transparency and negative sovereign outlooks have heightened concerns about policy predictability and governance. Potential outflows, equity volatility, and tighter financial conditions could affect fundraising, valuations, and foreign investors’ willingness to expand exposure to Indonesian assets and ventures.
Gas Supply and Production Gap
Domestic gas output is around 4.2 billion cubic feet per day against demand near 6.2 billion, leaving Egypt reliant on LNG and pipeline imports. Arrears repayments and new discoveries may support upstream investment, but supply tightness still threatens industrial continuity.