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:
Rand Volatility and Inflation Risks
South Africa remains highly exposed to global risk-off moves. Inflation rose to 4.5% in May, with petrol prices up 28.7% year on year and diesel up 53.8%, while capital outflows are pressuring the rand, borrowing costs and import-dependent operating expenses.
Digital sovereignty and semiconductor push
Berlin is prioritizing domestic computing infrastructure, AI capacity and semiconductor resilience to reduce reliance on U.S. and Chinese technology platforms. Germany aims to double computing capacity within five years, while large chip and data-center investments improve long-term supply-chain security for advanced industry.
Export Push And Localisation
The government is restructuring export support and industrial policy to deepen local manufacturing and curb import dependence. Engineering exports reached about $6.5 billion in 2025, while new digital export services, investor platforms and an industrial fund aim to strengthen trade competitiveness.
Maritime Energy Dispute Delays
UNCLOS conciliation over the 26,000 sq km Gulf of Thailand overlapping claims area affects offshore energy prospects estimated at roughly 10–12 trillion cubic feet of gas and major oil volumes. Non-binding proceedings may prolong investor caution over contract certainty and resource access.
EU Investment Reorientation Toward India
The planned EU-India trade agreement is already prompting expansion plans from European firms, with 96% of surveyed German companies expecting positive effects and about half planning concrete moves, reinforcing India’s role as a manufacturing, export, and diversification base.
EU Accession Reshapes Regulation
The opening of Ukraine’s first EU accession cluster accelerates alignment in rule of law, customs, border management, competition, and governance. For investors, this improves long-term regulatory convergence, though compliance burdens, political friction, and delayed legislation still create near-term execution uncertainty.
AI Power Demand Reshapes
Explosive data-center growth is straining U.S. electricity systems, especially in Texas and PJM markets, where regulators are reassessing who pays for generation and grid upgrades. Rising power costs, interconnection delays, and local opposition could affect industrial siting, cloud expansion, and operational reliability.
China dependence complicates payments
Russia’s trade reorientation leaves it heavily dependent on Chinese demand, technology channels and non-Western financial plumbing. This concentration increases vulnerability to secondary sanctions, payment bottlenecks and asymmetric bargaining power, limiting flexibility for companies using Russia-linked supply and settlement networks.
Japan-UK Tech Security Expands
Japan and Britain signed an economic security declaration and frontier technology partnership covering semiconductors, AI, critical minerals, energy and supply chains. With associated projects cited at over $24 billion, the partnership strengthens friend-shoring opportunities but may intensify competitive standard-setting across allied markets.
Certeza jurídica pesa en inversión
Las reformas judiciales de 2024 y dudas sobre independencia de tribunales han elevado inquietud inversora justo antes de la revisión comercial. Para proyectos intensivos en capital, la combinación de menor certeza jurídica y negociación externa compleja puede frenar expansión, financiamiento y decisiones de largo plazo.
Digital Regulation and Privacy Tightening
New federal bills would strengthen privacy, regulate AI and digital safety, and create penalties up to C$25 million or 5% of global revenue. With C$2.3 billion in AI strategy funding, firms face both growth opportunities and higher compliance, governance and data-localization pressures.
Severe Inflation Currency Collapse
Iran’s macroeconomic environment is acutely unstable, with reported inflation near 84-85 percent, food inflation above 100 percent, and the rial around 1.75-1.77 million per U.S. dollar. Extreme price volatility undermines contracts, consumer demand, payroll planning, and imported input affordability.
Social Unrest and Logistics Disruption
Planned anti-immigration protests in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal have renewed concern over unrest. Security assessments warn of road blockages, delivery delays, business shutdowns and looting, echoing the 2021 riots that caused about R50 billion in losses and 354 deaths.
Middle Corridor Logistics Expansion
Turkey is positioning itself as Europe’s key overland gateway as Red Sea, Black Sea, and Hormuz disruptions reshape trade routes. Ankara cites $355 billion in transport investment and new rail projects, creating logistics opportunities but also execution, border-processing, and customs bottleneck risks.
Regional conflict and security escalation
Renewed Israel-Iran exchanges, continuing Gaza instability, and persistent missile threats are driving operational uncertainty, insurance costs, contingency planning, and investor risk premiums. Regional airspace disruptions and shelter directives also raise business continuity concerns for multinationals and visiting executives.
War economy shows mounting strain
Recent reporting points to near-stagnation or recessionary conditions, persistent inflation, weaker freight volumes and labor-market distortions from mobilization and emigration. For foreign businesses, the result is softer demand, financing stress, payment uncertainty and a more interventionist operating environment.
Energy partnership realignment
Azerbaijan’s SOCAR has expanded across Israel’s gas sector, including a 10% Tamar stake and new exploration licenses, while linking with Egypt, Jordan, and Turkey. This deepens foreign participation but also embeds Israeli energy assets within a more contested regional geopolitical architecture.
Port and Export Labor Disruptions
Industrial disputes at Port Hedland and the Ichthys LNG project exposed Australia’s export vulnerability. BHP warned Port Hedland disruptions could cost more than A$120 million daily, while Ichthys strikes interrupted cargoes from a facility producing 9.3 million tonnes annually, stressing supply-chain reliability concerns.
Energy Sector Confidence Rebound
Cairo says it cleared $6.1 billion of arrears to foreign oil and gas partners, restoring overdue payments to zero. Combined with 102 discoveries since July 2024 and planned $17 billion investment, this improves upstream sentiment, though domestic supply reliability remains strategically important.
Reglas de origen más estrictas
Washington quiere endurecer verificación y reglas de origen para frenar componentes chinos o vietnamitas en exportaciones mexicanas. Esto elevaría costos de cumplimiento, rediseño de proveedores y trazabilidad, especialmente en automotriz, electrónicos y manufactura avanzada con cadenas transfronterizas altamente integradas.
EU Trade Rules Tighten
New EU steel safeguards and wider carbon-related compliance are raising market-access risk for Korean exporters. Brussels plans to cut tariff-free steel quotas to 18.3 million tons and impose 50% tariffs above quotas, pressuring steel, manufacturing and downstream supply chains.
Nickel Policy Volatility Risks
Indonesia’s tighter nickel royalties, lower mining quotas, tougher FX retention, and stronger state control have raised investor anxiety. With over US$65 billion in Chinese nickel investment exposed, expansion delays, higher required returns, and supply-chain uncertainty threaten EV and metals strategies.
Weak domestic demand pressure
China’s internal demand remains soft despite export resilience. In May, retail sales fell 0.6% year on year, the first contraction since late 2022, while fixed-asset investment dropped 4.1%, increasing stimulus expectations but weighing on consumer-facing sectors and corporate earnings.
US-Zölle belasten Exportmodell
Die transatlantischen Handelsbeziehungen bleiben unsicher trotz EU-US-Zolldeal. Deutschlands Exporte in die USA sanken im ersten Quartal um 12,1 Prozent, besonders bei Autos und Teilen. Weitere US-Zolldrohungen erhöhen Kosten, fördern Produktionsverlagerungen und erschweren Planung für exportorientierte Unternehmen.
USMCA Review and Tariff Risk
Canada faces elevated uncertainty ahead of the July 1 USMCA review as Washington signals annual reviews, not renewal. Ongoing disputes over autos, steel, aluminum, dairy and procurement could disrupt cross-border investment planning, sourcing decisions and tariff exposure management.
Privatization and Reform Openings
The government signaled upcoming privatizations in power distribution companies, banks, and airports, alongside digital tax administration reforms. These moves could create entry points for foreign strategic investors and service providers, but execution, regulation, and political resistance remain material business risks.
Semiconductor Upgrade Gains Momentum
Vietnam is pursuing a move up the value chain through semiconductor design, advanced manufacturing and engineering capacity. Official plans include training more than 50,000 engineers by 2030 and building at least 100 domestic design firms, creating opportunities in electronics ecosystems and talent competition.
Forced-Labour Compliance Tightening
U.S. pressure over forced-labour enforcement has pushed Ottawa toward faster legislative tightening, with a possible additional 10% U.S. tariff threat on non-compliant imports. Importers should prepare for stricter traceability, supplier due diligence and customs scrutiny across global sourcing chains.
Reform Agenda Changes Business Climate
The Merz government is preparing reforms across taxes, labor markets, pensions, bureaucracy and industrial energy support. Proposed measures include faster permitting, corporate relief and longer working lives, potentially improving investment conditions but also creating near-term policy uncertainty for employers and investors.
China Tariffs Reshape Sourcing
US tariffs, sanctions and export controls on China continue to redirect rather than repatriate production. A recent business survey found 72% of US firms were hit by tariffs, while only 14% expanded domestic output and 36% shifted manufacturing to third countries.
Regional Gas Hub Ambitions
Egypt is leveraging Idku and Damietta, the region’s only LNG plants, plus regasification capacity of 2.7 billion cubic feet daily, to reinforce its East Mediterranean hub role. This supports energy trading and infrastructure investment, but leaves industry exposed to regional gas-flow disruptions.
Logistics Hub Expansion Drive
Saudi Arabia is accelerating its logistics-hub strategy through airport, port and rail investment under Vision 2030. Businesses could benefit from stronger multimodal connectivity, re-export capacity and warehousing opportunities, but execution, financing and regional competition remain important commercial variables.
Regulatory Predictability Investment Barrier
Beyond physical security, investors still cite regulatory inconsistency as a major deterrent. One pharmaceutical investor said war did not halt expansion, but unpredictable regulator behavior did, after more than $12 million invested—highlighting permitting, testing, and rule-of-law risks for new entrants.
Immigration Rules Tighten Labor Supply
Proposed work-permit restrictions and H-1B reforms, including wage-based selection, higher fees, tighter renewals, and potential limits on OPT, threaten access to skilled and flexible labor. Sectors dependent on foreign talent may face rising labor costs, slower hiring, and operational bottlenecks.
Energy Security And Route Risks
Conflict in West Asia is elevating risks for shipping lanes, fuel costs, and supply chains. India is diversifying crude procurement, monitoring LNG and LPG supplies, and using policy buffers, but import-dependent industries still face exposure to energy and logistics volatility.
Palm Oil Pricing Intervention
Authorities are pressuring mills over falling fresh fruit bunch prices despite stronger global CPO prices and a firmer dollar, with police action threatened. This signals heavier state intervention in agribusiness pricing, raising compliance, contract-enforcement, and margin-management concerns across palm supply chains.