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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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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.

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Tax reform transition execution risk

Implementation of Brazil’s tax reform (dual VAT-style CBS/IBS and related rules) is moving from legislation to operationalization, forcing multinational ERP, invoicing, and pricing changes. During transition, interpretation disputes and compliance complexity can raise costs and delay customs-credit recovery.

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US interim trade reset

A new US–India interim framework cuts peak US tariffs to ~18% on many Indian goods, with some lines moving to zero, while India lowers duties on US industrial and select farm products. Expect near-term export uplift but ongoing uncertainty around Section 232 outcomes.

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Carbon policy and possible CBAM

Safeguard Mechanism baselines and the newly released carbon-leakage review open pathways to stronger protection for trade-exposed sectors, including a CBAM-like option. Firms should anticipate higher carbon-cost pass-through, reporting needs and border competitiveness effects for metals and cement.

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Electricity reform and tariff shock

Eskom restructuring remains contested, but Ramaphosa reaffirmed an independent transmission entity and 2026 transmission tenders. Meanwhile Nersa-approved hikes of ~8.8% in 2026/27 and 2027/28 raise input costs, affecting energy-intensive industry, pricing and investment.

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Fiscal credibility and debt trajectory

Rising gross debt projections (Treasury ~83.6% of GDP by end of Lula term; market sees >90% from 2029) are driving talk of recalibrating the fiscal framework, raising borrowing costs and FX volatility that affect pricing, capex, and repatriation planning.

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Carbon pricing and green finance ramp

Thailand is building carbon-market infrastructure: cabinet cleared carbon credits/allowances as TFEX derivatives references, while IEAT secured a US$100m World Bank-backed program targeting 2.33m tonnes CO2 cuts and premium credits. Exporters gain CBAM hedges, but MRV and reporting burdens rise.

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South China Sea security spillovers

South China Sea tensions remain a structural tail risk as ASEAN and China push for a Code of Conduct by 2026 amid recurring incidents. Businesses should plan for insurance premium spikes, routing adjustments, and contingency sourcing if maritime frictions intensify.

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Foreign investment scrutiny intensifies

Heightened national-security screening of capital flows—via CFIUS and Defense “FOCI” mitigation reviews—raises execution risk for cross-border M&A and minority stakes, especially in aerospace, AI, space, and dual-use sectors, potentially altering valuation, governance terms, and closing timelines.

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Kızıldeniz/Süveyş lojistik şoku

Kızıldeniz güvenlik krizi nedeniyle navlun, sigorta ve teslim süreleri dalgalanıyor; bazı hatlar Afrika çevresine yöneliyor. Türkiye’nin Avrupa-Ortadoğu bağlantılı ihracatında transit süreleri uzayabilir. Envanter, alternatif rota ve çoklu taşıyıcı stratejileri önem kazanıyor.

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توسع الموانئ والممرات اللوجستية

خطة لوجستية وطنية تربط موانئ المتوسط والبحر الأحمر بموانئ جافة ومناطق صناعية عبر سبعة ممرات متعددة الوسائط، مع توسعات أرصفة عميقة بنحو 70 كم. التشغيل التجريبي لمحطة «تحيا مصر 1» بدمياط بطاقة 3.5 مليون TEU يعزز قدرات المناولة وجذب الخطوط.

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Energy Import Dependence and Transition

Energy prices remain a key macro risk; IMF flags shocks like higher energy costs as inflation-extending. At the same time, expanding renewables and nuclear projects reshape industrial power pricing and grid investment. Energy-intensive manufacturers should plan for tariff volatility and decarbonization requirements.

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Semiconductor reshoring pressure intensifies

Washington is pressing for major Taiwan chip relocation (public 40% target), linking future tariffs and Section 232 outcomes to US investment. TSMC’s US build-out and Taiwan pushback create strategic uncertainty for capacity planning, supplier localization, and long-term pricing.

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Sanctions escalation and compliance spillovers

Ukraine is expanding sanctions targeting Russian defence supply chains, financiers, and crypto/payment networks, often coordinated with EU packages. Multinationals must strengthen screening for third-country intermediaries, dual-use items, and maritime counterparties to avoid secondary exposure and reputational risk.

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Deposit flight and confidence shocks

Regional banks remain exposed to rapid deposit migration toward money funds and large banks during stress. Even isolated failures can trigger precautionary cash moves by corporates, disrupting payroll liquidity, trade settlement cycles, and working-capital availability for importers/exporters.

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Rupiah volatility and import costs

The rupiah’s depreciation episodes and tight monetary stance can raise hedging costs and complicate pricing for import-dependent sectors. Businesses should expect periodic FX-driven margin pressure, potential administrative frictions, and greater emphasis on local sourcing and USD liquidity management.

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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.

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China-Abhängigkeit und De-Risking

China ist wieder größter Handelspartner (2025: €251,8 Mrd.), bei stark steigendem Defizit (≈€89,3 Mrd.). Exportkontrollen bei Seltenen Erden und wachsende Wettbewerbsfähigkeit chinesischer Anbieter erhöhen Lieferketten- und Absatzrisiken; Unternehmen diversifizieren Beschaffung und Märkte.

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Cross-strait conflict and blockade risk

China’s intensified air and naval activity raises probability of coercion or a Taiwan Strait blockade, threatening a route cited as carrying roughly 50% of global commercial shipping. Firms should stress-test logistics, insurance, inventory buffers, and alternative routing.

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AUKUS industrial build-out

AUKUS commitments are translating into massive domestic defense infrastructure and procurement, including an estimated A$30bn submarine yard at Osborne. This reshapes industrial capacity, workforce demand, and supply chains for steel, specialized components, cyber, and sovereign capability requirements.

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Logistics upgrades and multimodal corridors

Dedicated Freight Corridors, Gati Shakti cargo terminals, port connectivity and new national waterways aim to reduce transit times and logistics costs. Firms can redesign distribution networks, but should factor land acquisition delays, last-mile bottlenecks, and regulatory fragmentation.

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China export curbs on Japan

Beijing sanctioned 40 Japanese entities, restricting exports of dual-use goods to 20 and putting 20 more on a watch list. Escalation over security tensions raises supply-chain disruption risk for aerospace, electronics and automotive, plus countermeasure uncertainty.

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Fiscal rules and policy volatility

Chancellor Rachel Reeves faces criticism that the UK’s fiscal framework over-emphasizes narrow “headroom,” risking frequent policy tweaks as forecasts move. For investors, this elevates uncertainty around taxes, public spending, infrastructure commitments, and overall macro credibility.

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Non‑Tariff Barriers in Spotlight

U.S. negotiators are pressing Korea on agriculture market access, digital services rules, IP, and high‑precision map data for Google, alongside scrutiny of online-platform regulation. Outcomes could reshape market-entry conditions for tech, retail, and agrifood multinationals and trigger retaliatory measures.

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Critical minerals alliance reshaping

Washington is building a “preferential” critical-minerals trade zone with price floors and stockpiling, pressuring partners to align and reduce China exposure. Canada’s positioning will affect mining, refining, battery investment and eligibility for U.S.-linked supply chains.

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Electricity market reform execution

Rapid shift from Eskom monopoly toward a competitive wholesale market hinges on unbundling and an independent transmission entity. A R400bn/10‑year grid plan and trading rules must land; execution slippage could reintroduce load shedding and deter capital.

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Green hydrogen export corridors

Projects like ACWA’s Yanbu green hydrogen/ammonia hub (FEED due mid-2026; operations targeted 2030) and planned Saudi–Germany ammonia logistics corridors could create new trade flows. Businesses should assess offtake contracts, certification standards, and port-to-port infrastructure readiness.

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Government funding shutdown risk

Recurring shutdown episodes and looming DHS funding cliffs inject operational risk into travel, logistics, and federal service delivery. TSA staffing and Coast Guard/FEMA readiness can degrade during lapses, affecting airport throughput, cargo screening, disaster response, and contractor cashflows.

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Taiwan as Asia asset-management hub

Regulatory reforms (50+ rule revisions; 38 new activities) are building Kaohsiung’s Asian Asset Management Center, attracting banks and insurers to pilot cross-border products. Improved market infrastructure may deepen local capital pools, aiding project finance, M&A, and treasury operations.

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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.

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Lira Volatility and FX Liquidity

Structurally weak long-term capital inflows and limited buffers keep USD/TRY risk elevated, raising import costs and FX debt-service burdens. Market surveys still price ~51–52 USD/TRY horizons, implying ongoing hedging needs, tighter treasury controls, and higher working-capital requirements for import-dependent sectors.

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Gulf-backed mega projects and FDI push

The Ras El Hekma development continues with Abu Dhabi-linked partners, while Egypt targets doubling annual FDI from ~$12bn to $24bn via faster licensing (from ~24 months to under 90 days). Real-estate and infrastructure inflows can stabilize FX and demand.

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EU-Nachhaltigkeitsregeln und Lieferkettenpflichten

Die Umsetzung/Überarbeitung von EU-CSDDD/„Omnibus“-Paketen und die Verzahnung mit deutschen Sorgfaltspflichten verschieben Compliance-Anforderungen. Fokus auf Tier‑1‑Lieferanten, Haftungsfragen und Berichtspflichten verändern Vertragsgestaltung, Auditprogramme und Lieferantenauswahl; Reputations- und Bußgeldrisiken bleiben.

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Aid conditionality and fiscal dependence

Ukraine’s budget is heavily war-driven (KSE: 2025 spending US$131.4bn; 71% defence/security; US$39.2bn deficit) and relies on partner financing. EU approved a €90bn loan for 2026–27 and an IMF $8.1bn program is pending, but disbursements hinge on reforms and compliance.

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Water scarcity and treaty pressures

Historic drought and Mexico–U.S. water treaty obligations are becoming operational risks, particularly for water-intensive industries in northern hubs. Potential rationing, higher tariffs, and community pushback can disrupt production, requiring water audits, recycling investment, and site selection adjustments.

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Defense localization and offset requirements

Saudi Arabia is expanding defense industrialization, targeting over 50% localization of defense spending by 2030; localization reached 24.89% by end‑2024. New SAMI subsidiaries and industrial complexes increase requirements for local content, technology transfer, and Saudi supplier development across programs.