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:
Red Sea security and Suez reliability
Shipping lines continue to oscillate between Trans-Suez and Cape routes as Red Sea risks persist, undermining schedule reliability. Even partial diversions materially affect Egypt’s foreign-currency earnings and global supply chains, raising freight costs, transit times, and insurance premiums.
Nickel quota cuts, ore imports
Pemerintah memangkas kuota produksi nikel 2026 ke ~250–270 juta ton dari RKAB 2025 379 juta; Weda Bay dipotong ke 12 juta wmt dari 42. Smelter berpotensi defisit 90–100 juta wmt dan impor bijih (2025: 15,84 juta ton; 97% Filipina) meningkat, mengguncang rantai pasok EV/stainless.
Critical minerals supply-chain buildout
Government funding, tax incentives and US partnership are accelerating Australian mining-to-processing capacity (e.g., strategic reserve, new prospectus projects, antimony output). This reshapes EV, semiconductor and defence inputs, and raises permitting, ESG and offtake-competition dynamics.
Cost-competitiveness in processing
High energy, labor and compliance costs are challenging Australia’s ambitions to move up the value chain, illustrated by the planned closure of a WA lithium refinery amid weak prices. Investors should stress-test projects for cost inflation and price bifurcation scenarios.
Power grid and CFE investment gap
Electricity availability and interconnection delays increasingly constrain industrial expansions. Reports of reduced CFE investment and grid stress elevate outage and curtailment risk, pushing firms toward onsite generation, energy-efficiency capex, and more complex PPAs and permitting.
Heat-pump demand volatility
Germany’s heat‑pump market remains policy‑sensitive, with demand swinging as subsidy rules and GEG expectations change. This volatility affects foreign manufacturers’ capacity planning, distributor inventory, and installer pipelines, raising risk for long‑term investment and cross‑border component sourcing.
IMF program, refinancing pressure
Pakistan’s near-term macro path hinges on the IMF EFF/RSF reviews and continued rollovers from China, Saudi and UAE. Falling reserves (about $15.5bn) and a $1.3bn Eurobond due April 2026 elevate convertibility, payment and counterparty risk.
Data protection and digital trade pressure
DPDP Act implementation and India–US digital trade commitments may reshape cross-border data transfers, localization expectations, and platform regulation. Multinationals should prepare governance, consent management, breach response, and contract updates amid evolving rules and enforcement.
H-1B tightening and talent costs
New wage-weighted H-1B selection and a $100,000 fee for many new petitions raise labor costs and reduce predictability for global staffing. Multinationals may shift to L-1 transfers, expand offshore delivery centers, and adjust U.S. project timelines and location strategies.
Finanzas aisladas y de-risking bancario
El aislamiento financiero (incluido el estigma AML/CFT y limitaciones de corresponsalía) restringe pagos transfronterizos, trade finance y cobertura. Aumenta el uso de intermediarios, trueque o cripto, elevando costos de cumplimiento, riesgo de fraude y demoras en liquidaciones.
Financial isolation and FATF blacklisting
FATF renewed Iran’s blacklist status and broadened countermeasures, explicitly flagging virtual assets and urging risk-based scrutiny even for humanitarian flows and remittances. This further constrains correspondent banking, raises settlement friction, and increases reliance on opaque intermediaries—complicating trade finance and compliance for multinationals.
Foreign investment scrutiny and CFIUS
Elevated national-security screening of foreign acquisitions and sensitive real-estate/technology deals increases transaction timelines and remedies risk. Cross-border investors should expect greater diligence, mitigation agreements, and sectoral red lines in semiconductors, data, defense-adjacent manufacturing, and critical infrastructure.
Shadow fleet logistics under scrutiny
Iran’s crude exports rely on AIS manipulation, reflagging, and ship‑to‑ship transfers via hubs such as Malaysia; recent India interdictions highlight rising enforcement spillover. Firms face higher freight/insurance costs, voyage delays, cargo provenance disputes, and elevated KYC/Know‑Your‑Cargo requirements.
Disinflation and rate-cut cycle
Inflation has eased into the 1–3% target, with recent readings near 1.8% and markets pricing further Bank of Israel rate cuts. Lower borrowing costs may support demand, but a stronger shekel can squeeze exporters and reshuffle competitiveness across tradable sectors.
Ports, air cargo, multimodal logistics
Major logistics capacity is coming online: Great Nicobar transshipment port (phase 1 by 2028; 4+ million TEU), FedEx’s ₹2,500‑crore Navi Mumbai air hub, and Gati Shakti rail cargo terminals. These can lower export lead times but add project, permitting, and integration risk.
Secondary tariffs and sanctions escalation
New measures broaden U.S. economic coercion, including tariffs on countries trading with Iran and expanded sanctions on Iranian oil networks. Multinationals face higher compliance costs, shipping and insurance frictions, potential retaliation, and heightened due diligence on counterparties and trade finance.
US–Indonesia trade pact reset
The Reciprocal Trade Agreement expands market access but creates compliance and political risks: Indonesia promises fewer export restrictions to the US yet keeps raw-ore bans, while most US imports face 0% tariffs. Firms should anticipate regulatory follow-through and potential renegotiation pressures.
AI hardware export surge and tariffs
High-end AI chips and servers are driving trade imbalances and policy attention; the U.S. deficit with Taiwan hit about US$126.9B in Jan–Nov 2025, largely from AI chip imports. Expect tighter reporting, security reviews, and shifting tariff exposure across AI stacks.
Capital flows, rupee and repatriation
Net FDI has turned negative (‑$1.6B in Dec 2025) as repatriation hit ~ $7.5B and outward Indian investment rose to $2.7B; episodic FII selloffs pressure INR. Currency volatility impacts import costs, hedging strategy, and pricing for export-oriented operations.
Strategic transport assets under scrutiny
Proposed sale of ZIM to Hapag-Lloyd (~$3.5–4bn) triggered strikes and government review via a “golden share.” Heightened state intervention risk in logistics and critical infrastructure could affect foreign M&A approvals, continuity planning, and emergency supply obligations.
Russia sanctions and enforcement
The UK rolled out its largest Russia sanctions package since 2022, targeting Transneft (moving over 80% of Russia’s crude exports), 48 shadow-fleet tankers and ~300 entities. Firms face heightened screening, shipping/insurance risk, and penalties for circumvention.
Security shocks disrupting logistics corridors
Cartel violence, roadblocks and elevated cargo theft can abruptly halt flows on Manzanillo–Guadalajara–border routes, tightening trucking capacity and raising lead times. With 82% of theft concentrated in central/Bajío regions, shippers increasingly need secure carriers, tracking and rerouting plans.
Chip industrial policy acceleration
A new semiconductor competitiveness law creates a presidential commission, special funding accounts, cluster support, and streamlined permits to expand memory, foundry, packaging, and AI chips. This strengthens Korea’s onshore supply chain but keeps labor-hour flexibility contested for fabs.
Real estate tightening and credit risk
Government is tightening property speculation via limits on loan rollovers for multi-home owners and ending tax relief, while some banks show rising SME delinquencies. Tighter credit conditions can raise financing costs for businesses, impact construction demand, and influence consumer-driven sectors.
Mining law and licensing uncertainty
The Mineral Resources Development Amendment Bill has been criticized for ambiguity, while debates over BEE conditions, beneficiation and application timelines continue. Exploration spend fell to about R781m in 2024 (from R6.2bn in 2006), constraining future output and investor appetite.
Geoeconomic diversification toward Gulf
Berlin is accelerating diversification of energy and strategic inputs, courting Qatar/Saudi/UAE for LNG and green ammonia. LNG was ~10% of German gas imports in 2025, ~96% from the US, raising concentration risk. New corridors affect contracting and infrastructure plans.
Supply-chain exposure to sectoral probes
Even as some broad tariffs were struck down, U.S. Section 232 investigations into additional sectors (e.g., aircraft, critical minerals, pharmaceuticals) keep Canadian exporters at risk. Companies should scenario-plan for sudden duty changes, certification requirements and localization pressures.
Green hydrogen export corridors
Saudi green hydrogen is moving from ambition to execution. ACWA’s Yanbu green hydrogen/ammonia hub targets FEED completion by mid‑2026 and operations in 2030, alongside plans for a Germany ammonia corridor. This creates long-lead opportunities in EPC, shipping, storage, and offtake contracting.
Maritime logistics and ZIM uncertainty
A potential sale of ZIM to Hapag-Lloyd and resulting labor action highlight sensitivity around strategic shipping capacity. Any prolonged strike, regulatory intervention via the state’s “golden share,” or ownership change could affect Israel-related capacity, rates, and emergency logistics planning.
China tech controls tightening
US export controls on advanced semiconductors and AI systems continue to tighten, with enforcement scrutiny over alleged chip diversion to China. Multinationals must redesign product roadmaps, licensing, and data-center sourcing while managing retaliation risk and compliance exposure.
Critical minerals and strategic supply chains
Canada is positioning critical minerals as a strategic lever for allied supply chains, alongside potential US investigations into minerals and stronger content rules. This boosts mining and processing opportunities, but raises permitting, community-consent, and export-control compliance requirements for investors and downstream manufacturers.
Data regulation tightening under DUAA
Most provisions of the UK Data (Use and Access) Act entered into force, expanding ICO powers and enabling fines up to £17.5m or 4% of global turnover under PECR. Multinationals face higher compliance costs for AI, marketing, and cross‑border data operations.
Tech resilience amid talent outflow
Israel’s tech sector remains pivotal (around 60% of exports) but faces brain-drain concerns, with reports of ~90,000 departures since 2023. Continued VC activity and large exits support liquidity, yet hiring constraints and reputational risk can affect scaling and site-location decisions.
Taiwan Strait gray‑zone disruption
Recent PLA activity—100+ aircraft sorties, missile firings into Taiwan’s contiguous zone, and coast‑guard involvement—supports a ‘quarantine’ coercion risk that raises insurance costs and delays shipping without open war. Supply chains should model rerouting, lead‑time buffers, and energy/port shocks.
Supply-chain reorientation away China
Tariffs and security policy are accelerating sourcing shifts: China’s share of U.S. non‑oil imports has reportedly fallen below 10% in 2025 as Mexico and Vietnam gain. Companies face dual-sourcing, rules-of-origin complexity, and higher transition costs but improved geopolitical resilience.
Manufacturing competitiveness under cost pressure
CBI surveys show manufacturing output falling (balance -14) and order books weak (-28), with export orders down and price expectations elevated (+26). High energy costs and volatile trade conditions are constraining investment, reshoring decisions and supplier stability across industrial value chains.