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:
Steel Safeguards and Trade Frictions
Recent negotiations around UK steel safeguard measures underline continued use of sector-specific trade defenses even alongside new trade agreements. Manufacturers, metals traders and downstream users should prepare for quota management, tariff risks and possible input-cost volatility across industrial 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.
Strategic Balancing Between China and US
China is Brazil's top trade partner (30% of exports) and a growing investor in EVs, rail and energy, while the US pressures Brasília to reduce ties. Brazil leverages rare-earth and critical-mineral reserves to negotiate, pursuing non-alignment to preserve growth.
Monetary Tightening Policy Uncertainty
Bank of Japan tightening expectations are strengthening, with a board member calling for rate hikes every few months toward a roughly 2% neutral rate. Yet government pressure for growth-supportive policy creates uncertainty for borrowing costs, bond yields, currency exposure and investment timing.
AI Chip Controls Tighten
Taipei is weighing broader export controls on advanced AI chips and servers to China, potentially criminalizing smuggling and extending restrictions beyond Huawei and SMIC. Firms face heavier compliance burdens, trade friction with Beijing, and possible rerouting of regional technology supply chains.
High-Tech Export Control Escalation
Semiconductors, AI and advanced manufacturing remain central to geopolitical competition. Even though Washington delayed new Entity List additions, more than 100 Chinese firms were reportedly under review, highlighting persistent risk of sudden restrictions on chips, software, equipment and cross-border research partnerships.
Tourism Policy and Enforcement Tightening
Tourism remains a major earnings pillar, but visa-rule changes and tougher enforcement are reshaping operations. India’s visa-free access was removed, while crackdowns on illegal foreign business structures and AI immigration surveillance could raise compliance burdens in key destinations like Phuket.
US Trade Frictions Rising
Australia faces renewed trade friction with Washington after a proposed 12.5% US tariff tied to alleged forced-labour enforcement gaps. Even if contested under the bilateral FTA, the move signals elevated policy unpredictability for exporters, compliance teams and cross-border investment planning.
Political Friction With Partners
Tensions between Israel’s government and key external partners, especially the United States over Lebanon and broader regional diplomacy, add policy uncertainty. For international firms, this can affect sanctions exposure, defense-related regulation, cross-border initiatives and the stability of medium-term investment assumptions.
Cambodia Border Tensions Persist
Thailand’s ceasefire with Cambodia is holding but remains fragile after 2025 clashes that killed nearly 150 people and displaced at least 300,000. Border frictions, closures, and militarisation raise logistics uncertainty for cross-border trade, labor movement, insurance costs, and contingency planning.
Section 301 Investigations Pressure Indian Exporters
USTR launched two Section 301 probes covering forced labour and excess capacity, proposing 12.5% tariffs on India and placing it on the Priority Watch List. With reciprocal tariffs struck down, this is Washington's main leverage mechanism, complicating supply chain and export planning.
Chinese Competition Reshaping Auto Sector
Intensifying Chinese competition and overcapacity pressure German carmakers. VW and BMW cite Chinese market weakness; VW shifts investment to subsidized, efficient Chinese production while reducing 500,000 vehicles of European and Chinese overcapacity each.
Technology investment momentum tested
Israel’s innovation economy remains strategically important, but geopolitical risk is testing foreign investor confidence and funding visibility. Any sustained rise in security stress, regulatory uncertainty, or market weakness could slow venture deployment, exits, hiring, and cross-border technology partnerships.
Infrastructure delivery bottlenecks
Major UK infrastructure execution remains unreliable, with 166 of 213 monitored projects rated red or amber. Cost overruns, planning delays and delivery slippage on projects like the Lower Thames Crossing weaken logistics efficiency, investor confidence and long-term site planning.
AI-Led Economic Overheating
Taiwan’s AI-driven boom is supporting rapid growth, strong exports, and buoyant capital markets, with official 2026 GDP forecasts near 9.6% and May CPI at 2.2%. The upside for investors is strong demand, but overheating can intensify wage, land, and infrastructure pressures.
Red Sea Security Exposure
Business conditions remain exposed to Red Sea and wider Middle East security shocks. Shipping patterns, insurance costs, fuel procurement and supply-chain timing can change rapidly with escalation around Gaza, Yemen, Iran or the Horn of Africa, complicating Egypt-linked trade operations.
City regulation competitiveness debate
The competitiveness of London’s financial centre is back in focus amid calls to cut red tape, ease capital requirements and revisit ring-fencing. Potential regulatory reform could influence investment flows, bank lending, listings activity and the attractiveness of the UK as a financing hub.
Taiwan Strait Conflict Tail Risk
A blockade or invasion could trigger up to $10 trillion in global losses, with Taiwan's GDP potentially contracting 40%. Bloomberg models project severe contractions across Asia, Europe and the US, making Taiwan Strait stability a central concern for global supply-chain risk planning.
Pressão sobre cadeias industriais
Uma eventual retaliação brasileira aos EUA pode encarecer máquinas, químicos, fármacos e outros insumos estratégicos. Isso aumentaria custos de produção, reduziria competitividade exportadora e pressionaria margens de empresas dependentes de cadeias globais e importações tecnológicas.
Energy Security and Import Exposure
Japan remains highly sensitive to oil, LNG, and naphtha disruptions, particularly via Middle East routes. Inflation risks from energy imports are feeding monetary tightening and corporate cost pressures, making energy procurement resilience and alternative sourcing central to industrial and supply-chain strategy.
Semiconductor Export Enforcement Tightens
Washington is intensifying scrutiny of advanced chip exports, including possible loopholes via overseas subsidiaries and foundries. This raises compliance burdens for semiconductor, cloud, and electronics firms, while increasing uncertainty for cross-border technology supply chains and partner-country operations.
Danantara Single-Gate Export Monopoly
State-owned PT DSI became sole exporter of coal, palm oil and ferro alloy (US$66bn, 23% of exports) from June 2026, full rollout January 2027. The WTO-sensitive policy aims to curb under-invoicing but raises concerns over hidden protectionism, state capture, and added compliance burdens.
USMCA Renegotiation Uncertainty
Virtual trilateral talks begin July 1 amid Trump's preference to let USMCA expire. Disputes over rules of origin (50% US content for autos), Section 232 metal tariffs, and Mexican constitutional energy/mining changes create North American supply-chain and investment uncertainty.
Sector Tariffs Distort Investment
Section 232 tariffs and related probes in autos, metals, wood, copper, and other sectors are changing relative costs across industrial value chains. Capital allocation, plant location, and supplier decisions increasingly depend on political exemptions and product classifications rather than market efficiency alone.
Weak Growth and Fiscal Pressures
German GDP growth forecasts hover near 0.8% with 2.9% inflation, dragged by the Iran war's energy shock. Public debt could rise from 63.5% to 76% of GDP by 2030, constraining fiscal flexibility.
Energiepreise treiben Deindustrialisierung
Hohe Strom-, Gas- und CO2-Kosten setzen energieintensive Branchen wie Gießereien, Glas und Metallverarbeitung unter starken Druck. Eine IW-Analyse warnt, dass ein weiterer Rückgang der Gussproduktion um 50 Prozent 65 Milliarden Euro Wertschöpfung und 588.000 Arbeitsplätze gefährden könnte.
Deepening Fiscal and Budget Crisis
Russia's budget deficit exceeded 6 trillion rubles by May, surpassing annual targets, forcing reliance on domestic borrowing and a VAT increase to 22%. Defense spending could exceed plans by 4-5 trillion rubles, straining banks and debt-service costs.
Trillion-Euro AI Chip Investment
Seoul unveiled a 10-year, up to 2.4 trillion euro program; Samsung and SK Hynix commit to new fabs and AI data centers (18.4GW by 2035), under Lee's 3-3-5 strategy to make Korea a top-three AI power.
Security-first regulatory tightening
Beijing is expanding controls over outbound investment, technology transfers, data flows, and overseas staffing from July 1. This security-driven approach raises compliance burdens for multinationals, complicates cross-border R&D and treasury operations, and increases legal exposure for firms handling sensitive information.
US Oil Sanctions Waiver Expires
Washington let its temporary Russian oil sanctions waiver lapse on June 17 as the Iran crisis eased, with Trump signaling renewed pressure. Russia's seaborne crude exports hit record highs to India, while China and Turkey adjusted purchases on price economics.
Energy Transition and Electrification Boom
Australia leads in rooftop solar (28GW, 4.3m homes) and battery uptake (400,000+ installations), reshaping energy markets. However, an unmanaged gas-network 'death spiral', grid-coordination needs and electrician shortages create infrastructure risks and opportunities for businesses.
Energy Resilience and Power Costs
Taiwan’s post-nuclear energy debate is intensifying as semiconductors and AI expand electricity demand. Summer tariffs remain in place, renewable deployment lags targets, and energy-security planning is increasingly tied to blockade scenarios, making power reliability, green electricity access, and long-term operating costs strategic board-level issues.
Diplomatic Pivot Reshaping US-Pakistan Relations
Pakistan's mediation in the US-Iran war and rapprochement with the Trump administration secured lower 19% tariffs, crypto and minerals deals, and improved investor sentiment, potentially unlocking trade, investment and Western engagement.
Suez Canal Security Shock
Red Sea instability remains Egypt’s largest external business risk, suppressing canal traffic and transit revenues. Analysts cite about $10 billion in losses, while any normalization would improve shipping reliability, lower freight costs, and support trade, tourism, and foreign-exchange inflows.
Platform Work Rules Tighten
After the ILO adopted a treaty covering digital platform workers, Brazil faces renewed pressure to formalize app-based labor affecting roughly 2 million workers. Future regulation could raise labor costs, alter delivery and mobility business models, and impose algorithmic transparency obligations on firms.
Governance and Rule-of-Law Discount
Turkey’s investment case is supported by industrial scale and geography, but long-term capital still faces governance concerns. Business sentiment remains constrained by persistent questions around legal predictability, property rights and institutional independence, which can raise risk premiums, slow FDI decisions and shorten investment horizons.