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:
Tourism Capacity and Local Taxes
Japan is expanding accommodation taxes across multiple prefectures and will triple the departure tax from JPY 1,000 to JPY 3,000 in July. These steps reflect overtourism management and fiscal needs, raising travel costs and affecting hospitality, retail, transport, and regional demand patterns.
Regulatory Reform and Investment Climate
The new government is advancing an omnibus law and ‘super license’ to consolidate approvals within 180 days and reduce bureaucracy. If implemented effectively, reforms could improve foreign investor entry, shorten project lead times, and partially offset Thailand’s longstanding regulatory complexity.
Energy Diversification Reshapes Trade
Seoul is accelerating crude and LNG diversification toward the United States, Kazakhstan and other suppliers to reduce Middle East dependence. This may improve resilience over time, but longer shipping routes, higher logistics costs, and policy-linked buying commitments will reshape sourcing strategies and bilateral trade flows.
Infrastructure Buildout Accelerates Fast
Vietnam is advancing a vast infrastructure push worth about US$200 billion, with more than 550 projects launched and plans for ports, airports, rail, and power. Better connectivity could lower logistics costs, but execution, debt, land clearance, and corruption risks remain material.
Fiscal Tightening and Election Risk
Brasília plans stricter fiscal triggers after a 2025 primary deficit of 0.4% of GDP, including limits on tax incentives and payroll growth. This supports macro credibility, but election-year politics and rigid indexed spending still raise financing and policy-uncertainty risks.
Trade Facilitation and Tax Simplification
Authorities introduced 33 tax facilitation measures, faster VAT refunds, simpler dispute resolution, and customs easings for returned exports amid regional shipping disruption. With tax revenue up 32% year on year in H1 FY2025/26, reforms could improve compliance, liquidity, and trading efficiency for formal businesses.
Energy Export Route Resilience
Saudi Arabia’s pivotal business theme is energy-route resilience as Hormuz disruption forces crude rerouting through Yanbu and the East-West pipeline. Red Sea exports reached about 4.4-4.6 million bpd, supporting continuity, but capacity limits, insurance costs, and maritime security risks remain material.
Semiconductor Export Boom Intensifies
AI-driven chip demand is powering South Korea’s trade performance, with semiconductor exports up 152% to $8.6 billion in early April and March ICT exports reaching $43.51 billion. This strengthens investment appeal but heightens sector concentration and advanced supply-chain dependency.
Growth Slowdown and Inflation
The government cut its 2026 growth forecast to 0.9% from 1.0% and raised inflation to 1.9% from 1.3%, citing Middle East-related pressures. Slower demand and higher input costs could affect pricing, investment timing, consumer spending and logistics planning.
Macroeconomic Reform and IMF
Egypt’s IMF-backed reform programme remains central to currency stability, sovereign financing, and investor confidence, with up to $3.3 billion in further disbursements linked to reviews this year. Businesses should expect continued policy tightening, subsidy reform, and regulatory adjustment.
Shadow Oil Trade Expansion
Iran continues exporting roughly 1.5-2.8 million barrels per day through dark-fleet shipping, ship-to-ship transfers and opaque intermediaries, largely to China. This sustains state revenues but heightens exposure to sanctions enforcement, shipping fraud, and reputational risk for traders and insurers.
Macroeconomic Volatility and FX Pressure
Egypt faces renewed inflation and currency stress as urban inflation rose to 15.2% in March, the pound weakened near EGP 53-54 per dollar, and rates remain at 19%. Higher import costs, financing costs, and pricing uncertainty complicate investment planning and trade execution.
Energy Price Shock Returns
Belgium faces another energy-cost shock linked to Middle East turmoil, with diesel above €2 per litre and heating oil above €1.6. Higher transport and utility costs threaten margins for logistics, manufacturing, agriculture, and energy-intensive businesses operating in Belgium.
Suez Economic Zone Manufacturing
The Suez Canal Economic Zone is attracting export-oriented industrial investment, including a proposed $2 billion Chinese aluminium complex creating about 3,000 jobs. This strengthens Egypt’s role as a manufacturing and re-export base serving Europe, the Gulf, and African markets.
Judicial Reform and Rule-of-Law
Mexico’s judicial overhaul continues to unsettle investors as lawmakers themselves now seek stricter eligibility and vetting rules after concerns about inexperienced judges. Businesses increasingly cite rule-of-law weakness as a top obstacle, affecting contract enforcement, dispute resolution and long-term capital allocation.
Sanctions Volatility Reshapes War Economics
Shifting U.S. and EU sanctions policy on Russian oil affects Ukraine indirectly by influencing Moscow’s revenues, energy prices, and the wider risk environment. Kyiv says over 110 shadow-fleet tankers carry about 12 million tonnes worth $10 billion, underscoring geopolitical exposure for traders.
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.
Oil Revenues Defy Price Cap
Russian oil exports remain commercially significant despite Western caps. Urals crude reportedly reached $94.5 per barrel in March, far above the $44.1 EU-UK cap, while Indian purchases rose sharply, underscoring persistent enforcement gaps and ongoing volatility in global energy trade.
Weak Demand, Strong Exports Imbalance
China’s domestic demand remains soft despite stimulus, while exports and industrial output still shoulder growth. Consumer inflation slowed to 1.0% in March and monthly CPI fell 0.7%, signaling cautious households and raising risks of prolonged overcapacity, pricing pressure and external trade tensions.
Defence Industrial Expansion Drive
Canada’s defence spending surge is reshaping industrial policy, supply chains and procurement. Ottawa says the strategy could create up to 125,000 jobs, raise defence exports 50% and channel more spending to domestic firms, creating opportunities in aerospace, shipbuilding, electronics and dual-use technologies.
Industrial stagnation and deindustrialization
Germany’s industrial model remains under severe strain, with output near 2005 levels, weak productivity and firms shifting capacity abroad. BASF downsizing, Volkswagen plant cuts and Intel’s delayed €30 billion project raise long-term concerns for suppliers, investors and manufacturing footprints.
Tax reform execution risk
The dual-VAT transition is advancing, with IBS/CBS regulation expected shortly, but implementation remains costly and complex. Estimates suggest adaptation costs could reach R$3 trillion by 2033, forcing companies to overhaul ERP, invoicing, contracts, logistics, and tax compliance during a prolonged overlapping regime.
Empowerment Rules Shape Market Entry
B-BBEE requirements remain a major determinant of foreign investment structures, especially in ICT and mining. South Africa is reviewing equity-equivalent pathways for multinationals, while mining-right renewals may require at least 26% black ownership, increasing structuring, compliance and political sensitivity for investors.
Cyber Threats Hit Operating Environment
Taiwan’s government network faced more than 170 million intrusion attempts in the first quarter, alongside warnings of data theft and election interference. Companies should expect stricter cybersecurity expectations, higher resilience spending, and elevated operational disruption risks for critical sectors.
U.S. Tariff Exposure Intensifies
Vietnamese exporters face rising U.S. trade risk after a temporary 10% Section 122 surcharge and Section 301 probes targeting overcapacity and labor enforcement. Electronics, apparel and furniture supply chains may need origin controls, tariff engineering and sourcing adjustments.
Oil Shock And Inflation Risks
Middle East conflict has sharply raised imported energy costs, pushing March inflation to 7.3% and forcing major fuel price pass-through. Higher logistics, power, and production costs will pressure margins, weaken consumer demand, and complicate procurement across trade-exposed sectors.
Gaza Ceasefire and Reconstruction Uncertainty
Unresolved ceasefire talks and uncertainty over Gaza governance and reconstruction continue to shape Israel’s external environment. Delays to withdrawal, disarmament and aid arrangements risk renewed escalation, while reconstruction financing uncertainty may affect regional projects, diplomacy and investor sentiment.
Critical Minerals Geopolitics Intensifies
Ukraine’s minerals are gaining strategic weight in reconstruction and foreign investment, but occupation risks are rising. Russia is exploiting deposits in seized territories, while Kyiv is channeling investor interest into minerals, gas, and oil projects, increasing competition, political risk, and due-diligence complexity.
State Revenue and Fiscal Pressure
Oil and gas still generate roughly a quarter of Russian budget proceeds, while the January-March 2026 fiscal deficit reached 4.58 trillion roubles, or 1.9% of GDP. Revenue swings increase tax, subsidy, and regulatory unpredictability, complicating market planning, investment timing, and sovereign risk assessment.
Shipping Routes Face Strategic Risk
Alternative routing through the Red Sea and Saudi Arabia’s Yanbu is easing some crude flows, but maritime risk remains elevated. Korean vessels, chokepoint exposure and possible Houthi or blockade-related disruptions continue to threaten logistics reliability, freight costs and delivery schedules.
CPEC and Infrastructure Reform Uncertainty
Pakistan continues to court Chinese and other foreign investment, but delays in privatisation, power-sector restructuring, and project execution complicate the investment climate. Infrastructure opportunities remain substantial, yet investors face slower timelines, regulatory uncertainty, and elevated implementation risk.
US Tariffs on Exporters
New US tariff measures are offsetting the usual benefits of a weak yen for Japanese exporters, especially autos, steel and industrial goods. Analysts estimate profits are already under pressure, with investment, hiring and North America supply-chain localization decisions becoming more urgent.
Monetary Policy and Inflation Uncertainty
The Bank of England held rates at 3.75%, but inflation is projected to reach 3.5% in Q3 2026 as businesses expect 3.7% price increases over the next year. This creates uncertainty for financing costs, consumer demand, capital expenditure and foreign investment timing.
Water Infrastructure Systemic Failure
Water insecurity is becoming a material business risk, especially in Gauteng and smaller municipalities. Nearly half of treated water is lost before delivery, 64% of wastewater works are critical, and recurring outages are driving higher private backup, compliance and operating costs.
Supply Chain Resilience Reconfiguration
Conflict-related shipping disruption, tighter petrochemical inputs and rising energy costs are exposing supply-chain vulnerabilities. Shortages of naphtha and chemical products could slow production, encouraging firms to diversify suppliers, localize inventories and reassess Japan’s role in regional manufacturing networks.
Labor and Trucking Capacity Squeeze
Federal and state enforcement affecting non-domiciled commercial drivers, including roughly 13,000 California CDL cancellations, is tightening freight capacity. Combined with seasonal demand and cargo theft growth, this raises delivery risk, warehousing pressure, and domestic distribution costs for companies operating across U.S. supply chains.