Mission Grey Daily Brief - February 04, 2025
Summary of the Global Situation for Businesses and Investors
The global trade war is escalating as President Donald Trump imposes tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China, and Europe. Global markets are bracing for chaos as retaliatory actions are announced by affected countries. Economists warn of spiralling prices and disrupted supply chains, while world leaders express concerns about the potential impact on global trade and economic growth. Businesses and investors should monitor the situation closely and adjust their strategies accordingly.
Global Trade War Escalates
The global trade war is escalating as President Donald Trump imposes tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China, and Europe. Global markets are bracing for chaos as retaliatory actions are announced by affected countries. Economists warn of spiralling prices and disrupted supply chains, while world leaders express concerns about the potential impact on global trade and economic growth. Businesses and investors should monitor the situation closely and adjust their strategies accordingly.
Tariffs and Retaliation
President Donald Trump has imposed tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China, citing concerns about <co
Further Reading:
A Rekindled Conflict Has Pushed Colombia Into a State of Emergency - New Lines Magazine
Britain cannot depend on Norway for electricity – we need our own power - The Telegraph
China calls Trump tariffs a 'serious violation' and vows to respond in kind - The Independent
China hits back as Trump’s tariffs go into effect - CNN
China shrugs off new Trump tariffs but bruising trade war looms - Hong Kong Free Press
Daybreak Africa: Uganda begins Ebola vaccine trial after new outbreak kills a nurse - VOA Africa
Global markets brace for chaos ahead of Trump's tariffs on Canada and China - NBC News
U.S. stocks, global markets fall on fears of a new trade war - NPR
US tariffs on imports set to rise drastically on Tuesday - Vatican News - English
Uh oh, Canada: Trump declares trade war on America's "best friend" - Axios
Themes around the World:
Municipal Governance and Service Breakdown
Weak local governance continues to undermine business conditions through unreliable electricity, water insecurity, poor roads and procurement failures. Ramaphosa said municipalities budget under 1% for maintenance versus Treasury’s 8% benchmark, heightening operational disruption and business-flight risks.
Labor Costs and Regulatory Volatility
Employers report 67% of firms do not plan new hiring and 50% lack five-year expansion plans, citing global uncertainty and repeated labor-rule changes. High severance and unit labor costs versus Vietnam and Cambodia risk diverting labor-intensive manufacturing and supply-chain relocation.
Euro 7 Cold-Climate Compliance
EU emissions rules are becoming a critical operating issue for Finland’s diesel-heavy mobile machinery fleet, as AdBlue freezes near -11°C. Re-certification burdens and possible market checks could raise compliance costs, delay product adaptation, and affect equipment usability in northern conditions.
Trade Digitization Improves Clearance
Pakistan Single Window has surpassed 100,000 users, processing 1.58 million declarations and 1.02 million permits, while port-community integration is accelerating vessel clearance. Despite broader macro risks, customs digitization is a meaningful positive for compliance efficiency, shipping visibility and cross-border trade execution.
Peso rates and weak growth
Mexico’s macro backdrop is mixed: GDP grew only 0.6% in 2025, while Banxico has cut rates to 6.75% even with inflation above target. Softer growth and possible peso volatility increase hedging needs, financing uncertainty and imported-input cost exposure.
Clean Tech Trade Tensions
China’s dominant position in solar and EV-related manufacturing is colliding with overseas industrial policy and trade defenses. Possible curbs on advanced solar equipment exports and continuing overcapacity concerns heighten tariff, anti-subsidy and localization risks for global clean-tech investors and buyers.
Political Friction and Governance Risk
Opposition municipalities continue to face detentions, suspensions and trustee appointments, while the main opposition also faces court-related leadership uncertainty. For investors, this raises concerns around rule-of-law consistency, local permitting, public procurement stability and the broader predictability of Turkey’s operating environment.
Freight and Energy Cost Pressures
Middle East disruption and higher fuel prices are lifting US logistics costs, with more than 34,000 shipping routes diverted and diesel remaining elevated. Port and trucking constraints are pushing surcharges higher, reducing schedule reliability, and pressuring importers, exporters, and inventory strategies.
Middle East Shocks Test Resilience
The Hormuz crisis has sharpened concern over Taiwan’s exposure to external energy disruptions and maritime chokepoints. Authorities cite stable oil inventories and a new US LNG deal for 1.2 million tonnes annually, but transport risks still threaten operating costs and production continuity.
Coalition Friction Delays Reforms
Tensions between the CDU-led chancellery and SPD are complicating tax, pension, health and debt-brake reforms. Political fragmentation, including AfD polling at 26%, raises policy unpredictability, slows implementation and makes it harder for businesses to assess Germany’s medium-term regulatory and fiscal direction.
Metals Tariffs Raise Input Costs
New U.S. plans to apply a 25% tariff on finished goods containing imported steel and aluminum, alongside 50% duties on some raw materials, will lift landed costs for manufacturers, complicate product classification, and pressure margins across construction, machinery, and automotive supply chains.
Sulfur Shock Hits Battery Metals
Indonesia’s nickel processing sector depends heavily on imported sulfur, with around 75% sourced from the Middle East. Supply disruptions and spot prices near $900-$1,000 per ton are adding roughly $4,000 per ton nickel to HPAL costs and threatening production continuity.
Solar Policy and Grid Disruption
Pakistan is tightening solar net-metering and billing rules while struggling to integrate rapid distributed generation growth. Policy uncertainty is reshaping power investment economics, battery demand and industrial self-generation decisions, with implications for equipment suppliers and energy-intensive firms.
Industrial Margin Squeeze Emerging
China’s producer prices rose 0.5% year-on-year in March, ending a 41-month deflation streak, but mainly because of higher energy and commodity costs. With consumer demand still weak, manufacturers face difficulty passing through input inflation, threatening margins, supplier solvency and pricing stability across export chains.
Major Port Expansion Momentum
Canada is committing large-scale capital to trade corridors, led by Montreal’s Contrecoeur expansion. Backed by C$1.16 billion from the Canada Infrastructure Bank, the project will add 1.15 million TEUs and materially strengthen eastern gateway capacity by 2030.
Bipartisan Shift Toward Protectionism
US trade strategy has moved away from broad liberalization toward tariffs, industrial policy, and narrower security-led agreements. This bipartisan shift suggests persistent barriers and compliance burdens beyond any single administration, requiring firms to plan for structurally higher intervention in cross-border trade and investment.
Energy Transition Needs Transmission
Australia’s clean-energy shift is accelerating, but grid and transmission delays remain a major commercial bottleneck. Modelling suggests residential power prices could fall 5% over five years, yet a one-year transmission delay could lift prices by up to 20% for businesses and households.
Power Security Drives LNG Buildout
Rapid electricity demand growth and heat-driven load spikes are accelerating LNG infrastructure and gas-fired generation. Key projects include the 3,000 MW Quang Trach complex, the $2.2 billion 1,500 MW Ca Na plant, and expanded Thi Vai terminal capacity.
Labor Shortages Delay Projects
Construction and infrastructure projects remain constrained by foreign-worker shortages after the loss of Palestinian labor access. The state comptroller highlighted a construction shortfall of about 37,000 workers, contributing to delayed housing delivery, slower transport works, and higher execution risk for investors and contractors.
Freight Costs Face Upward Pressure
US logistics costs are rising as Hormuz-related energy disruption, elevated diesel prices, trucking capacity exits, and cargo theft tighten domestic transport conditions. Port and rail networks remain operational, but shippers should expect higher trucking rates, volatility in freight budgets, and tougher routing decisions.
Trade Defence and Sanctions
The government is preparing anti-coercion powers allowing sanctions, export controls, import curbs or investment restrictions against economic pressure from major powers. Simultaneously, tighter Russia-diversion export licensing will raise compliance costs, especially for dual-use manufacturers shipping through intermediary markets.
US-Taiwan Trade Ties Deepen
Taiwan’s commercial alignment with the United States is strengthening through reciprocal trade arrangements, investment agreements, and supply-chain cooperation. U.S. imports from Taiwan rose by US$59.6 billion last year, while Taipei is defending gains from ongoing Section 301 investigations into overcapacity and forced labor compliance.
Water Infrastructure Systemic Failure
Water shortages and deteriorating municipal systems are becoming a major operating risk, especially in Gauteng. Non-revenue water losses reach 49% in Johannesburg and 44% in Tshwane, disrupting industrial activity, raising private supply costs and increasing governance exposure.
Automotive Investment Repositioning
South Africa’s automotive sector is being reshaped by localisation incentives and new entrants. Mahindra is assessing CKD expansion near Durban, while EV production enjoys a 150% investment allowance, creating opportunities but also intensifying competition from Chinese and Indian manufacturers.
Transport PPP and privatization drive
Saudi Arabia is accelerating private capital mobilization through PPPs and privatization, with 89 firms seeking prequalification for the Qassim airport project. The broader strategy targets $64 billion in private investment by 2030, creating opportunities in aviation, logistics, construction, and infrastructure services.
Labor Regulation Cost Pressure
Brazil’s policy debate on working-time and labor protections is raising concern over future operating costs, especially in services, retail, and platform-based sectors. Even before reform, wage pressures and labor-market tightness are contributing to sticky services inflation and compliance risk.
Gas export tax uncertainty
Canberra is actively considering reforms to gas taxation, including PRRT changes and possible export levies of 15-25%. With Australia exporting roughly 83% of its LNG, policy changes could reshape project economics, investor returns, domestic energy pricing and long-term capital allocation.
Black Sea Energy Expansion
Turkey is advancing Black Sea gas development and new exploration partnerships, including with TotalEnergies, to reduce import dependence. Sakarya output is expected to double in 2026, improving medium-term energy security, lowering external vulnerability and creating opportunities in infrastructure and services.
Nickel Quotas Reshape Supply Chains
Indonesia’s tighter RKAB mining quotas and possible 2026 cap near 250 million tons are constraining nickel ore availability against estimated smelter demand of 340-400 million tons, lifting prices, disrupting output, and forcing battery and stainless supply chains to reassess sourcing.
LNG Pivot Faces Bottlenecks
Russia is shifting LNG exports from Europe toward Asia, but vessel shortages, sanctions and longer voyages are limiting execution. Analysts estimate full diversion would cut Yamal shipments to roughly 120-130 annually, from around 270, raising delivery and revenue risks.
Oil Price And Freight Volatility
Conflict-linked restrictions in Gulf shipping have pushed Brent up by more than 30% in recent weeks, while Iranian crude pricing swung from steep discounts to premium levels. The volatility affects fuel procurement, petrochemical inputs, freight budgets, and inflation assumptions across supply chains.
Protectionism Clouds Import Demand
Retailers and manufacturers face weaker import visibility as tariffs, fuel costs, and consumer strain weigh on cargo bookings. U.S. first-half container imports are forecast at 12.3 million TEU, below last year, indicating softer goods demand and more cautious inventory planning.
Resource Nationalism Deepens Downstreaming
Recent policy moves show Indonesia is becoming more assertive in controlling commodity supply, domestic pricing and value capture rather than simply maximizing exports. For foreign companies, this favors local processing, joint ventures and compliance-heavy operating models over purely extractive strategies.
Slowing Growth and Stagflation Risk
Thailand’s macro outlook is weakening as higher energy costs, softer external demand, and fragile domestic activity converge. Official and private forecasts now place 2026 GDP growth around 1.2-1.6%, with inflation potentially rising toward 3.5-5.8% under more adverse conflict scenarios.
China Trade Stabilisation With Risks
Australia-China ties are improving, with both sides backing expanded trade, investment and possible upgrades to their free trade agreement. Yet dependence on China remains strategically sensitive, especially across LNG, mining and green industries, leaving businesses exposed to policy or geopolitical reversals.
Trade Logistics and Port Reconfiguration
Regional disruption is reshaping maritime flows through Karachi, where authorities report 99% of transshipment issues resolved and channel-deepening upgrades underway. Improving port performance could support trade resilience, but shipping volatility and customs costs still affect turnaround times and supply chains.