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:
Clean Energy Supply Chain Controls
China is considering curbs on advanced solar manufacturing equipment exports and already tightened controls on battery materials, graphite anodes, and related know-how. Given its dominance across solar components, batteries, and processing, these moves could reshape global energy transition supply chains.
Policy uncertainty around BEE
Ongoing court challenges and business criticism of Black economic empowerment rules underscore regulatory uncertainty. Firms warn ownership and procurement requirements could affect contracts, manufacturing decisions and supplier structures, complicating market entry, compliance planning and long-term capital allocation.
Supply Chain Monitoring Gaps
Delays to the government’s digitalized supply-chain early warning system weaken Korea’s ability to identify disruptions quickly. With rising risks from Chinese mineral export controls, tariff shifts, and energy shocks, businesses may face slower policy responses, higher inventory buffers, and procurement costs.
Private logistics reform momentum
Opening freight rail and terminals to private capital is creating selective upside for investors. Eleven private train slots have been awarded, African Rail plans $170 million of investment, and broader logistics concessions could gradually improve export reliability and corridor competitiveness.
Hormuz Disruption Reshapes Trade
Regional conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruption are forcing Saudi Arabia to reroute trade and oil flows toward the Red Sea and Yanbu. This improves resilience relative to neighbors, but raises transport risk, insurance costs, contingency planning needs and exposure to Red Sea security threats.
Foreign Firms Face Compliance Squeeze
Companies operating in China face growing tension between home-country sanctions, export controls, and Chinese anti-sanctions rules. The resulting compliance asymmetry increases board-level exposure, complicates internal controls, and may force difficult choices on market participation, suppliers, and partnerships.
Hormuz Disruption Threatens Logistics
Conflict around the Strait of Hormuz and maritime enforcement actions are disrupting Iran’s core trade artery, through which over 90% of its annual trade reportedly passes. Businesses face elevated freight costs, insurance premiums, delivery uncertainty and regional energy-market volatility.
Commodity and Energy Shock Exposure
Brazil’s inflation and logistics costs remain exposed to global oil and commodity volatility linked to Middle East tensions. Higher Brent prices are feeding fuel, freight and input costs, complicating monetary easing and pressuring margins across manufacturing, transport and agribusiness supply chains.
Energy Security and Oil Sourcing
India’s March crude imports fell 13% to 4.5 million barrels per day as Hormuz disruption hit Gulf supply, while Russian volumes nearly doubled to 2.25 million bpd. Businesses face higher freight, sanctions-compliance and energy-price risks despite temporary U.S. waivers supporting Russian cargoes.
Multi-front conflict security risk
Ongoing confrontation involving Gaza, Iran, Hezbollah and Red Sea spillovers continues to disrupt logistics, staffing and investor planning. Businesses face elevated contingency costs, air-travel interruptions, project delays and sudden operational restrictions tied to security alerts and military escalation.
Infrastructure Concessions and Investment
Brazil’s longer-term competitiveness still depends on expanding private investment in ports, logistics, sanitation, and transport concessions. Continued reforms can improve trade efficiency and market access, but fiscal rigidity and political uncertainty may slow project execution, permitting, and contract confidence.
Semiconductor Export Supercycle
April exports rose 48 percent year on year to $85.9 billion, with semiconductor shipments reaching $31.9 billion and memory prices surging sharply. Strong AI-driven demand supports trade and investment, but heightens concentration risk across Korea’s export base and supplier networks.
Mining And Industrial Expansion
Saudi Arabia is scaling mining, metals and manufacturing as non-oil export engines, with mineral wealth estimated around SR9.4 trillion, Saudi ranking 10th in Fraser’s mining index, and factory growth supporting supply-chain diversification, downstream processing and new partnership opportunities for foreign firms.
Energy Security Spurs Infrastructure
Supply risks are accelerating investment in renewables, grid upgrades, and domestic energy production. Egypt targets 45% of electricity from renewables by 2028, plans 2,500 MW of additions plus 920 MW of battery storage in 2026, and is reducing arrears to foreign partners.
Supply-Chain Security Lawfare Expansion
Beijing is expanding legal tools covering anti-sanctions, export controls and industrial supply-chain security, including extraterritorial reach. New powers to investigate foreign entities and counter ‘discriminatory’ restrictions increase operational uncertainty for multinationals, especially around compliance, licensing, data-sharing, and partner due diligence.
IMF-Driven Fiscal Tightening
Pakistan’s IMF-backed programme has unlocked about $1.2–1.32 billion, but ties stability to tighter budgets, broader taxation, and subsidy restraint. This supports near-term solvency and reserves while raising compliance costs, dampening demand, and constraining public spending relevant to investors.
Weak Growth and Demand Risks
UK growth expectations are softening as energy shocks and tight financial conditions weigh on activity. Official and think-tank forecasts point to roughly 0.8% to 0.9% growth, with rising unemployment risk, implying weaker domestic demand and more cautious corporate expansion decisions.
Export Boom Masks Volatility
March exports rose 18.7% year on year to a record $35.16 billion, driven by AI-related electronics and data-centre equipment. Yet demand is uneven: exports to the US jumped 41.9%, while shipments to China and the Middle East weakened sharply.
Aggressive Tax Audits Escalate
Multinationals are reporting harsher audits from Mexico’s tax authority, including challenges to credits, deductions and appeals. With tax collection having risen about 5% in real terms last year, foreign companies face growing fiscal exposure, documentation burdens and higher risk of prolonged disputes.
Won Weakness Inflation Pressure
The won has repeatedly crossed 1,500 per dollar as oil shocks, capital outflows and the US-Korea rate gap unsettle markets. Import prices jumped 16.1% in March, increasing hedging costs, squeezing margins and complicating pricing, treasury and investment decisions.
Defense Export Industrial Expansion
Japan’s relaxation of defense-export rules is opening new industrial and logistics opportunities, including frigate and equipment deals with Australia and the Philippines. The shift can diversify advanced manufacturing demand, deepen regional partnerships, and create new compliance and supply-chain considerations.
AI Export Boom Concentration
Taiwan’s exports rose 39% year on year to US$67.62 billion in April, driven by AI servers and advanced chips, but this strong concentration deepens exposure to cyclical swings, capacity bottlenecks, and policy shocks in major end-markets.
Nearshoring Advantage Faces Bottlenecks
Mexico remains central to North American nearshoring, with bilateral U.S.-Mexico trade exceeding $839 billion in 2024 and Mexico’s U.S. import share rising to 15.6%. Yet investment momentum is being constrained by policy uncertainty, delayed decisions and operational bottlenecks in infrastructure, energy and permitting.
CUSMA Review and Tariff Uncertainty
Canada’s top business risk is rising uncertainty around the July 1 CUSMA review, as U.S. demands on dairy, digital policy and China exposure collide with existing Section 232 tariffs, weakening investment visibility across autos, metals, energy and cross-border manufacturing.
Tourism Weakness Reduces Domestic Demand
Foreign arrivals are now projected at roughly 30–33.5 million, below earlier expectations, as higher airfares, fuel costs and geopolitical uncertainty curb travel. Weaker tourism affects retail, hospitality, transport, real estate and broader service-sector demand that many international firms rely on.
Outbound Investment Realignment
South Korea is preparing first projects under its $350 billion US investment pledge, with annual deployment capped at $20 billion and LNG infrastructure under review. The shift channels capital outward, influencing domestic investment allocation, bilateral market access, and supplier localization choices.
New Nickel Pricing Rules Bite
A new mineral benchmark pricing formula raises nickel cost assumptions and adds iron, cobalt, and chromium valuation, while shifting to wet-metric-ton pricing. This increases domestic ore costs, reduces arbitrage, and may pressure smelter margins, contract structures, and export pricing.
Labour Code Compliance Transition
India’s new labour code rules are reshaping wage, employment and workplace compliance obligations across industries. For international firms, the consolidated framework may simplify administration over time, but near-term legal interpretation, state-level implementation and labour relations risks could raise compliance costs.
Semiconductor Concentration Drives Global Exposure
Taiwan remains the central node for advanced chip production, with officials citing roughly 76% global share including related products. This concentration sustains investment appeal, but heightens customer pressure to diversify manufacturing, deepen inventory buffers, and reassess single-island exposure in critical technology supply chains.
Mercosur deal boosts tensions
The EU-Mercosur agreement entered provisional force on 1 May, cutting tariffs on cars, pharmaceuticals, and wine into a 700-million-consumer market. France strongly opposes it over agricultural competition, creating political friction, sectoral winners and losers, and compliance uncertainty for agri-food investors.
Logistics Exposed to Climate
Recurring Amazon drought and low river levels continue to threaten barge corridors vital for grains, fuels and regional supply chains. Climate-related logistics disruption increases freight volatility, delivery delays and inventory costs, especially for exporters dependent on northern routes and inland distribution.
EV Manufacturing Competitive Shift
Chinese EV brands now dominate Thailand’s market momentum and are scaling local production, reinforcing the country’s role in regional auto manufacturing. This supports supplier localization and export potential, but intensifies price pressure on incumbents and demands infrastructure adaptation.
Escalating Oil Sanctions Pressure
US sanctions and tanker seizures are sharply constraining Iran’s oil exports, including action against a 400,000 bpd Chinese refinery and around 40 shippers. Secondary-sanctions risk now extends to banks and intermediaries, materially raising compliance, payments, insurance, and cargo-routing costs.
Energy Leverage and Export Infrastructure
Energy is emerging as Canada’s strongest negotiating lever with Washington. Canadian energy exports to the U.S. reached nearly C$170 billion in 2024, while new pipeline, electricity, LNG, nuclear and West Coast export projects could materially improve supply resilience and investor appeal.
Nickel Downstreaming Dominates Strategy
Indonesia is doubling down on nickel processing and battery supply chains, reinforced by a new Philippines corridor. With 66.7% of global nickel output and processed nickel exports at US$9.73 billion in 2025, the sector remains central to industrial investment and sourcing decisions.
BOJ Tightening and Yen Volatility
The Bank of Japan is signaling a possible June rate hike from 0.75% to 1.0% as inflation risks rise. Yen intervention of up to ¥10 trillion and moves near ¥160 per dollar are reshaping hedging costs, import bills, pricing and capital allocation.