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:
Critical Minerals Supply Chain Push
Ottawa is accelerating graphite and rare-earth financing to build non-Chinese supply chains for batteries, defence, and advanced manufacturing. Recent public commitments include about C$459 million for Nouveau Monde Graphite and C$175 million for the Strange Lake rare-earth project.
Rail market liberalisation reforms logistics
Competition is expanding in passenger rail, with Trenitalia on Paris–Marseille and Transdev operating Marseille–Nice after tendering. Service frequency and investment are rising, but labour tensions and fragmented ticketing illustrate transition risk, affecting mobility planning for firms and staff.
External funding dependence and Gulf leverage
Pakistan’s external position relies on IMF signalling plus Gulf deposits and deferred oil facilities; Islamabad is seeking longer-tenor Saudi support. Rollovers can become geopolitical leverage, affecting FX stability, payment terms and sovereign credit spreads that price corporate funding.
Treasury Market Stress Builds
Weak demand at recent US Treasury auctions, a roughly $10 trillion refinancing need, and war-related fiscal pressures are pushing yields higher. Rising benchmark rates increase financing costs for corporates, reduce valuation support for risk assets, and tighten conditions for cross-border investment and debt-funded expansion.
Security Ties Supporting Commerce
Australia and the EU paired the trade agreement with a new security and defence partnership, including closer maritime and industrial cooperation. For business, stronger strategic alignment improves confidence in supply continuity, defence-adjacent manufacturing, secure technology transfer, and Indo-Pacific logistics resilience.
Fiscal Consolidation and Budget Risk
France cut its 2025 public deficit to 5.1% of GDP from 5.8%, but debt still stands at 115.6%. Tight 2026 budgeting, offsetting any new spending with cuts elsewhere, could reshape taxes, subsidies, procurement and public investment conditions.
Foreign Capital Outflows Accelerate
Foreign investors have sharply reduced exposure to Turkish assets, including more than $4.6 billion of government-bond sales and over $1 billion in equity outflows during recent turbulence. This weakens market liquidity, raises borrowing costs, and complicates refinancing for Turkish corporates and banks.
Border Bottlenecks Pressure Logistics
Western land routes remain critical, yet border friction is materially constraining supply chains. Poland handled 82% of Ukraine’s fuel flows in 2025 and Gdansk about 40% of container traffic, but protests, inspections and customs delays threaten predictability and raise transit costs.
Customs union modernization push
Ankara is prioritizing customs-union modernization amid deeper EU-Türkiye trade (reported $233B in 2025). Potential updates could reshape rules-of-origin, services, public procurement, and dispute mechanisms, influencing market access strategies, investment siting, and supplier qualification.
Critical Minerals And Strategic Industry
Ukraine is positioning critical minerals and related strategic industries as a cornerstone of reconstruction finance and Western partnership. This improves long-term resource investment prospects, but projects remain exposed to wartime security threats, permitting uncertainty, infrastructure constraints, and geopolitical sensitivities.
Inflation And Currency Collapse
Iran’s macroeconomic instability is acute, with reported February inflation around 68.1%, food inflation near 110%, and the rial near 1.35-1.6 million per US dollar. Pricing, wage setting, contract enforcement, and consumer demand are all highly unstable for foreign businesses.
Energy Tariffs and Circular Debt
IMF-backed energy reforms require timely tariff adjustments, fewer subsidies, and action on chronic circular debt. For manufacturers and foreign investors, higher electricity and fuel costs could pressure margins, while reforms in transmission, generation privatization, and renewables may gradually improve power reliability.
RBA tightening and inflation shock
The RBA lifted the cash rate to 4.10% in a split 5–4 vote as core inflation stays above target and oil-driven price pressures build. Higher borrowing costs and a stronger AUD shift demand, financing conditions, and FX hedging for importers/exporters.
Labor constraints and automation push
Persistent labor shortages are accelerating automation in logistics, manufacturing, and services, while lifting wage pressures. For multinationals, this raises operating costs but improves productivity potential; success depends on digital investment, supplier modernization, and navigating evolving immigration and work-style rules.
High Rates Affordability Pressure
Inflation remains near 3% and borrowing costs stay elevated, with mortgage rates above 6% and energy prices rising amid Middle East tensions. Persistent affordability pressure weighs on US demand, raises financing costs, and complicates sales forecasts for consumer-facing and capital-intensive sectors.
Chabahar Waiver Keeps Corridor Alive
India’s Chabahar port arrangement remains under a conditional US waiver valid until April 26, while India has completed its $120 million equipment commitment. The port preserves a strategic route to Afghanistan and Central Asia, but future sanctions treatment clouds logistics investment decisions.
Green hydrogen export platform
Saudi is positioning for future energy trade via the Neom Green Hydrogen project: 4 GW renewables, up to 600 tonnes/day hydrogen, exported as up to 1.2m tonnes/year green ammonia. A 30-year offtake with Air Products de-risks investment and builds new maritime chemical logistics.
Fuel Subsidies Distort Energy Economics
Jakarta will keep subsidized fuel prices unchanged even with oil above US$100 per barrel, absorbing costs through the budget. This cushions short-term consumer demand and logistics costs, but increases fiscal strain and policy risk for energy-intensive businesses.
Persistent Energy Infrastructure Disruption
Russian missile and drone strikes continue to damage power and gas networks, triggering household blackouts and industrial power restrictions across multiple regions. Recurrent outages raise operating costs, disrupt manufacturing schedules, complicate logistics, and increase demand for backup generation and energy security investments.
Patchwork AI Rules Face Reset
The White House is pressing Congress for a single national AI framework to preempt divergent state laws, while also easing permitting and encouraging regulatory sandboxes. The outcome will influence compliance burdens, data-center siting, intellectual-property treatment, and technology investment decisions.
Domestic Defence Industrial Expansion
Canada is turning defence procurement into an industrial policy lever, including C$1.4 billion for ammunition production and expanded BDC financing. This supports supply-chain localization, advanced manufacturing and dual-use technology growth, creating opportunities for foreign partners aligned with allied security standards.
Urban Renewal Infrastructure Push
China is channeling stimulus through urban renewal and housing upgrades rather than old-style property expansion. Beijing’s first 2026 batch includes 1,321 projects with planned initial investment of 104.95 billion yuan, creating selective opportunities in materials, equipment, services and smart-building supply chains.
Energy sanctions flexibility amid Iran war
Oil-market disruption from the Iran conflict is driving temporary U.S. sanctions waivers affecting Russian and Iranian-linked shipping and crude flows. Energy-intensive manufacturers and shippers face volatile fuel prices, insurance terms, and sanctions-compliance ambiguity across trading partners.
China Exposure Drives Supply Diversification
Weaker exports to China and broader geopolitical friction are reinforcing Japanese efforts to diversify production, sourcing and end-markets. Companies with concentrated China exposure face higher resilience spending, while alternative Asian and European corridors become more strategically important.
GCC Supply Chain Integration
Riyadh is deepening Gulf logistics integration through storage zones, truck rule easing, and cross-border freight facilitation. Saudi land ports handled 88,109 outbound GCC trucks in 25 days, while Dammam now offers redistribution zones and storage-fee exemptions up to 60 days.
State ownership policy and privatization push
Cairo is updating the State Ownership Policy to expand private participation, including integrating state entities into the budget, removing preferential treatment, and clarifying commercial activities. If implemented credibly, this could open M&A and PPP opportunities, while execution risk and governance remain key.
Reshoring Incentives Support Manufacturing
Federal industrial strategy continues to favor domestic production in semiconductors, defense-linked manufacturing, and strategic supply chains, reinforced by tariff policy and AI-led productivity ambitions. Multinationals may benefit from localization incentives, but must balance them against higher labor, compliance, and input costs.
Energy Diversification Infrastructure Push
Taiwan is expanding LNG diversification toward 14 source countries, increasing planned US imports from about 10% to 25% by 2029, and advancing terminal infrastructure. These moves improve resilience, but infrastructure timelines and environmental approvals remain critical execution risks.
Escalating Regional Security Risk
Conflict involving Iran, US, Israel, and potentially the Houthis is raising threat levels for ports, tankers, energy assets, and airspace. Businesses face higher geopolitical risk premiums, contingency costs, and possible disruption across Gulf-facing operations.
Climate and Food Supply Risks
Flood damage, agricultural volatility and rising food import dependence are increasing operational and inflation risks. Food imports reached $5.5 billion in 7MFY26, while climate-related crop shortfalls have already triggered emergency purchases, exposing agribusiness, consumer sectors and transport-intensive supply chains to instability.
Semiconductor geopolitics and export controls
US controls on advanced AI chips are clouding demand visibility for Samsung and SK Hynix, especially in HBM memory tied to Nvidia shipments. China-market restrictions, bloc fragmentation, and Korean fab exposure raise earnings, compliance, and supply-chain strategy risks.
Defence Spending Reshapes Industry
Canada has reached NATO’s 2% spending target with more than $63 billion in defence outlays, triggering major procurement and industrial expansion. New contracts in munitions, rifles, naval infrastructure and aerospace should lift manufacturing demand, domestic sourcing and allied supply-chain integration.
Middle East Shock Transmission
Escalating Middle East tensions are feeding directly into Korea’s industrial base through higher oil prices and tighter gas-related inputs. With 64.7% of Korea’s helium imports sourced from Qatar in 2025, prolonged disruption would raise semiconductor production costs materially.
Trade Defences Signal Industrial Intervention
Government is using stronger trade remedies to protect domestic industry. Anti-dumping duties of 74.98% on Chinese structural steel and 20.32% on Thai imports highlight a more interventionist stance, affecting sourcing strategies, input prices and manufacturing competitiveness.
Fiscal Discipline Under Market Scrutiny
Investor concern over Indonesia’s 3% budget-deficit ceiling intensified after officials floated temporary flexibility if oil stays high. Markets reacted with equity losses, higher bond yields, and negative rating outlook pressure, increasing sovereign risk premiums and uncertainty for long-term capital allocation.
Semiconductor Supply Chain Vulnerability
South Korea’s chip sector faces multiple shocks at once: US export controls affecting Samsung and SK hynix demand, AI-driven bottlenecks, and dependence on critical inputs such as helium, bromine and tungsten, raising supply, cost and customer-delivery risks.