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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:

At Donald Trump’s inauguration rally, here’s what his supporters think about annexing Canada: ‘It would be fantastic’ - Toronto Star

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

Panama turned its canal into a money-maker. History shows why Trump’s threats are sounding the alarm bells - CNN

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

Trump sworn in as 47th US president, says he's taking back Panama Canal; doesn't mention Ukraine - Kyiv Independent

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:

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Power Shortages Disrupt Industry

Pakistan’s electricity shortfall widened to 3,400 MW as hydropower output fell 48% year on year and LNG disruptions persisted. Outages of six to seven hours in some areas threaten factory utilization, telecom continuity, cold chains and delivery reliability.

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FDI Momentum with Execution Questions

Saudi FDI inflows rose 13% in 2025 to above SR1 trillion, while total FDI stock reached SR3.32 trillion, up 19%. The trend supports market-entry confidence, although large-project execution, policy consistency, and state-led demand remain central investor risk considerations.

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Growth Slowdown and Demand Cooling

Growth momentum is moderating as tight policy and geopolitical pressures weigh on activity. The IMF cut Turkey’s 2026 growth forecast to 3.4% from 4.2%, while officials report weaker capacity utilization, slower credit expansion and softer demand, tempering near-term market opportunities across multiple sectors.

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Wage Growth and Cost Pass-Through

Japan’s spring wage settlements remain strong, with average pay rises of 5.08% for a third straight year above 5%. Rising labor costs support consumption but also encourage broader corporate price pass-through, affecting operating margins, retail pricing, and long-term inflation assumptions.

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Asia Pivot Reshapes Trade Flows

Russian crude and broader trade are tilting further toward Asia, with more cargoes moving to India and sustained dependence on China and intermediary hubs such as the UAE. This reorientation alters shipping routes, payment practices, sourcing networks and competitive dynamics for international suppliers.

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Trade Policy and Strategic Screening

Germany is backing a more defensive European trade posture amid tariff pressure, unfair-competition concerns and strategic dependency risks. Policymakers favor stronger investment screening, local-content preferences and diversified trade agreements, shaping market access, M&A reviews and sourcing decisions for foreign firms.

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Energy Shock Through Hormuz

Japan imports roughly 90% of its crude from the Middle East, leaving industry exposed to Strait of Hormuz disruption. Higher oil, LNG, freight and input costs are squeezing margins, lifting inflation and raising contingency planning needs across supply chains.

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Major port and freight expansion

Federal and Western Australian governments committed A$1.1 billion to upgrade Anketell Road for the planned Westport terminal at Kwinana. The project should improve freight efficiency, lower congestion and emissions, and expand long-term capacity for imports, exports, defence, and critical minerals.

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Fiscal Credibility Under Scrutiny

The government proposed a 2027 primary surplus of R$73.2 billion, but broad fiscal exclusions reduce the effective surplus to roughly R$8 billion. Ongoing doubts over rule credibility may sustain higher risk premiums, currency volatility, and cautious investor positioning.

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Tourism And Event Economy Boom

Tourism reached 123 million visitors in 2025 with spending of $81.1 billion, or about SR304 billion by local reporting, while airports, hospitality and mega-events expand demand across construction, retail, aviation and services, creating openings but also capacity and labor pressures.

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Turkey As Regional Hub

The government is expanding tax incentives to attract foreign firms, traders and financial institutions, positioning Istanbul as a safer regional base. Interest from Gulf and Asian investors is rising, but high inflation, legal uncertainty and bureaucracy still temper execution and long-term confidence.

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Manufacturing Investment Acceleration

India’s policy push is reinforcing its role in supply-chain diversification. Gross FDI reached $88.29 billion in April-February FY2025-26, with officials projecting $90 billion, while electronics, auto-EV, aerospace, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and food processing continue attracting multinational capital and supplier ecosystems.

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LNG and Nuclear Buildout

Vietnam is accelerating major LNG and nuclear-linked cooperation to secure baseload power, including US$2.23 billion Quynh Lap and US$2.2 billion Ca Na projects plus South Korean nuclear discussions. These projects improve long-term energy resilience but create execution, financing, and import-dependence risks.

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Air Connectivity Remains Unstable

International flight capacity is still constrained, with many foreign carriers delaying Tel Aviv returns into May or later. Ben Gurion disruptions, elevated fares, and safety advisories complicate executive travel, cargo uplift, tourism, and time-sensitive business logistics despite gradual restoration by Israeli and Emirati airlines.

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Agriculture Export Margin Pressures

Rice and other farm exporters face higher fuel, freight and insurance costs amid Middle East disruptions, while Thailand still targets over 7 million tonnes of rice exports. Margin compression affects agribusiness investment, food supply contracts and rural demand linked to consumer markets.

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Weak Domestic Demand Split

China’s recovery remains unbalanced. April manufacturing PMI held at 50.3 and export orders returned to expansion, but non-manufacturing PMI fell to 49.4, a 40-month low. Weak consumption and services demand constrain revenue growth for consumer, retail, and domestic-facing investors.

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Vancouver Bottlenecks Threaten Exports

A February failure at Vancouver’s 57-year-old Second Narrows rail bridge disrupted roughly $1 billion in daily port trade. With 170.4 million tonnes handled last year, infrastructure fragility is raising supply-chain risk for oil, grain, potash, coal, and broader Indo-Pacific export strategies.

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Tensión comercial con China

México profundiza su estrategia de sustitución de importaciones y contención a bienes chinos mediante mayores aranceles y vigilancia sobre triangulación. Esto favorece proveedores regionales y nearshoring, pero eleva costos de insumos, exige mayor contenido regional y puede provocar represalias comerciales.

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FDI Rules Selective Liberalisation

India is easing some restrictions on investment from land-bordering countries by allowing up to 10% non-controlling stakes and proposing 60-day clearances in selected manufacturing sectors. The changes could improve venture and industrial capital inflows, especially in electronics, components, and strategic manufacturing.

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Sanctions Escalation Hits Payments

US sanctions pressure is intensifying, including threatened secondary sanctions on banks and firms in China, the UAE, Hong Kong, and Oman. This constrains settlement channels, trade finance, correspondent banking, and compliance appetite for any Iran-linked transaction or investment structure.

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Trade corridors depend on recovery

Israel’s trade access is improving unevenly as some foreign airlines and shipping channels resume, but Red Sea and wider Middle East security risks still distort routing. Businesses should expect volatile freight availability, elevated insurance and continued dependence on resilient alternate corridors.

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China Exposure Faces Scrutiny

Mexico is under intensifying U.S. pressure to restrict Chinese inputs, investment, and transshipment through North American supply chains. Tariffs of up to 50% on many China-origin goods and tighter customs enforcement may reshape sourcing models across manufacturing sectors.

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Infrastructure-Led Logistics Expansion

Vietnam is linking energy, ports, and industrial development more closely, including Ca Na’s deep-water wharf and related multimodal logistics plans. Improved connectivity can support export scaling, but execution delays, permitting friction, and uneven regional capacity remain operational constraints.

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Trade remedies raising input costs

Australia lifted tariffs on Chinese steel reinforcing bar to 24% from 19% after anti-dumping findings. While supporting domestic manufacturers, higher trade barriers may increase construction costs, add inflation pressure, and affect project economics for investors across real estate, infrastructure, and industrial sectors.

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Judicial reform investor certainty

Mexico’s judicial overhaul is raising investor concerns over contract enforcement, regulatory disputes and rule-of-law predictability. U.S. officials have openly warned that judges must remain qualified and independent, as any perception of political or criminal influence could weaken capital inflows.

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Electronics Export Surge Reshapes

March exports jumped 18.7% year on year to a record US$35.16 billion, driven by AI-related electronics and data-centre equipment. Strong US demand supports manufacturers, but falling shipments to China and the Middle East expose concentration and geopolitical demand risks.

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China De-risking Reshapes Sourcing

US tariffs continue pushing firms to diversify away from China, yet supply chains remain indirectly exposed through Southeast Asia and Mexico. China-origin imports fell 6.7% year on year in March, but transshipment and component dependency still complicate true de-risking.

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Energy market integration push

Legislation on electricity-market integration, renewables permits and energy liberalization is advancing Ukraine’s alignment with the European market. This supports future cross-border power trade and investment, but implementation remains vulnerable to war damage, delayed funding and regulatory slippage during accession-linked reforms.

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Shadow Fleet Compliance Exposure

Iran relies heavily on opaque shipping structures, AIS spoofing, front companies and multi-flag tanker networks spanning jurisdictions such as Panama, Cameroon and the Marshall Islands. For insurers, ports, traders and charterers, beneficial-ownership screening and cargo-traceability risks are rising materially.

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Supply Chains Shift Toward Mexico

Tariff volatility is accelerating nearshoring into Mexico and wider North America. Logistics providers report more cross-border freight, diversified ports, bonded facilities, and modular networks, meaning companies must redesign inventory, routing, and distribution footprints rather than wait for policy clarity.

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Sanctions Broaden Secondary Exposure

US sanctions on Iran-linked trade are widening compliance risks for global firms, especially in shipping, energy and finance. Recent measures targeted a 400,000-barrel-per-day Chinese refinery, dozens of shippers and 19 vessels, increasing due-diligence demands across cross-border transactions.

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Critical minerals supply-chain surge

Australia and the United States have committed more than A$5 billion to critical minerals projects, supporting rare earths, nickel, graphite, tungsten and gallium. This strengthens non-China supply chains, expands processing investment, and creates new opportunities in mining, refining, technology and defence industries.

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USMCA Review and Tariff Reset

Mexico faces its most consequential trade negotiation in years as formal USMCA talks begin May 25. Washington signaled 25% auto tariffs and 50% steel duties may persist, raising costs, compressing margins, and undermining export-led manufacturing decisions.

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Privatization and FDI Pipeline

Egypt is accelerating asset sales, petroleum listings, and foreign investment promotion, targeting $60 billion in FDI by 2030. Reduced arrears to foreign energy firms and faster licensing could improve market entry, though execution risk and state-led policy shifts still warrant caution.

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Expanded Sanctions and Secondary Risk

The U.S. is intensifying sanctions enforcement on Iranian oil networks and signaling broader secondary sanctions on foreign banks, shipping, and traders. Companies with exposure to China, the Gulf, or energy logistics face greater counterparty screening needs and payment disruption risks.

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Fiscal Credibility and Debt

Brazil’s 2027 budget targets a R$73.2 billion primary surplus, but debt is still projected to peak near 87.8% of GDP in 2029. Fiscal triggers limiting spending and tax incentives shape sovereign risk, financing costs, exchange rates, and long-term investment decisions.