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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

Donald Trump’s tariff wallop demonstrates the brute power of an imperial presidency - The Conversation

Global markets brace for chaos ahead of Trump's tariffs on Canada and China - NBC News

Trump announces significant new tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China, sparking retaliatory actions - CNN

Trump hits Canada, Mexico and China with steep new tariffs, says Americans could "some pain" - CBS News

Trump hits Canada, Mexico and China with steep new tariffs, says Americans could feel "some pain" - CBS 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

World reacts to Trump's order for tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, as he warns Europe will be next - CBS News

Themes around the World:

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AI Chip Investment Surge

Samsung plans record spending above 110 trillion won, or roughly $73 billion, to expand AI chip, HBM and foundry capacity. This strengthens Korea’s semiconductor ecosystem, but raises competitive intensity, supplier concentration, and execution risks across global electronics supply chains.

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Labor Enforcement and Compliance Pressure

USMCA labor provisions are becoming more forcefully enforced, with U.S. stakeholders focusing on wages, union democracy, transparency and labor conditions. Export manufacturers face growing risks of complaints, shipment disruption and reputational damage if labor governance and plant-level compliance prove insufficient.

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EU Trade Pact Reshapes Flows

Australia’s new EU free-trade agreement removes tariffs on nearly all critical mineral exports and over 99% of EU goods, with estimates of A$7.8-10 billion annual economic gains, improving market access, investment certainty, services trade and supply-chain diversification.

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Public investment and logistics constraints

Federal infrastructure investment rose 49.7% in real terms in January-February to R$9.5 billion, offering some support to transport and logistics capacity. However, discretionary spending remains exposed to fiscal compression, limiting execution certainty for ports, roads, and broader supply-chain modernization.

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AUKUS Industrial Uncertainty Persists

Australia’s AUKUS submarine program is driving defence infrastructure and industrial spending, especially in Western Australia, but delivery risks remain contested. For business, this means opportunities in defence supply chains alongside uncertainty over timelines, workforce constraints, and long-term procurement planning.

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Austerity And Demand Constraints

To meet IMF targets, authorities are targeting a 1.6% of GDP primary surplus in FY26 and 2% underlying balance in FY27, alongside spending cuts. Fiscal restraint may stabilize sovereign risk, but it can suppress domestic demand and public-project momentum.

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Infrastructure and Port Expansion

Major port, airport and corridor projects are improving Vietnam’s supply-chain attractiveness, notably Da Nang’s $1.7 billion Lien Chieu terminal and logistics upgrades linked to Cai Mep–Thi Vai. Better maritime connectivity should reduce costs, diversify routes, and support export-oriented manufacturing investment.

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Deflation and Weak Domestic Demand

China is in a prolonged low-price environment, with producer prices reportedly falling for 40 consecutive months and the GDP deflator still negative. Weak consumption, fragile employment, and pricing pressure are squeezing margins, complicating revenue forecasts, and limiting the strength of domestic-market growth strategies.

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Domestic Demand Remains Weak

China’s persistent property stress and subdued consumption continue to push policymakers toward export-led growth, intensifying global concerns over overcapacity and dumping. For foreign businesses, this supports lower-cost sourcing but heightens external trade friction, margin pressure, and volatility in sectors exposed to Chinese industrial surpluses.

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Red Sea shipping disruption

Houthi threats have revived concern over Bab el-Mandeb after more than 100 merchant vessels were targeted in 2023-25. With Suez containership transits reportedly down 33% in late March, freight costs, insurance premiums, lead times, and routing uncertainty remain significant.

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Fiscal Strain Lifts Market Risk

US public debt near $39 trillion, annual interest costs around $1 trillion, and possible war spending and tariff refunds are intensifying fiscal concerns. A wider deficit could push yields higher, weaken bond demand, and increase volatility in funding markets central to global business finance.

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Quality Rules Complicate Market Access

India’s expanding Quality Control Orders and certification requirements continue to affect imports of components, chemicals and industrial inputs. While supporting domestic manufacturing objectives, unclear timelines and burdensome compliance can delay sourcing decisions, increase testing costs and disrupt multinational supply-chain planning.

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Semiconductor Controls Tighten Further

Washington’s proposed MATCH Act would expand restrictions on chipmaking tools, servicing, and software for Chinese fabs including SMIC and YMTC. Tighter allied coordination could further disrupt semiconductor supply chains, slow China capacity upgrades, and complicate technology sourcing, production planning, and cross-border partnerships.

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EU Trade Pact Reshapes Access

Australia’s new EU trade deal removes over 99% of tariffs on EU goods, could add about A$10 billion annually, and lift EU exports by up to 33% over a decade, materially reshaping sourcing, market-entry, investment, and regulatory conditions.

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Logistics and Supply Chain Resilience

Turkey is leveraging its infrastructure and geographic position as a production and logistics hub spanning Europe, the Gulf and Central Asia. With a logistics sector valued around $112 billion, enhanced land routes and customs facilitation may improve resilience, though regional security risks remain material.

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Labor Restrictions Disrupt Logistics

Immigration and licensing changes are tightening labor supply in freight, agriculture, and construction. New CDL rules could eventually affect nearly 194,000 immigrant truck drivers, while farm and worksite enforcement is worsening shortages, raising transport costs, project delays, and food-sector operating risks.

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Labour Shortages Reshape Production

Demographic decline is tightening labour availability across manufacturing and logistics. Japan’s working-age population is projected to fall 17% to 62 million by 2040, while foreign manufacturing workers have just exceeded 100,000, increasing pressure on wages, automation and supplier resilience.

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China soybean access uncertainty

Brazil is negotiating soybean phytosanitary rules with China after exporters said stricter weed controls complicated certification. Any easing would support agribusiness shipments, but the episode underlines concentration risk in Brazil-China trade and vulnerability to non-tariff barriers.

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US Trade Probe Escalation

Seoul is responding to new U.S. Section 301 probes on excess capacity and forced labor, with autos and semiconductors exposed. The risk of fresh tariffs or compliance burdens could reshape export pricing, investment allocation, and Korea-U.S. production strategies.

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Industrial Export Sectors Under Pressure

Steel, autos, lumber, cabinets, and other manufacturing segments remain exposed to U.S. duties. Canadian steel exports to the U.S. were reportedly down 50% year-on-year in December, while affected firms are cutting output, jobs, and capital spending.

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Reform Momentum Meets Governance Risk

Government is pursuing rail, port and infrastructure reform, including open-access rail and more private participation, but governance concerns remain. Transnet’s dispute over R42.9 billion in irregular expenditure highlights lingering institutional weakness, raising execution risk for investors relying on logistics and infrastructure turnaround.

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Fiscal Strain and Growth Slowdown

The IMF expects Japan’s growth to slow to 0.8% in 2026 while urging fiscal prudence amid very high public debt. Rising interest, healthcare and energy-related costs may constrain future support measures, influencing tax, subsidy and public-investment conditions for businesses.

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Trade Exposure To External Shocks

Indonesia remains vulnerable to external disruptions from Middle East energy routes, U.S. trade actions, and capital outflows. Pressure on fuel imports, the rupiah, and sovereign ratings can quickly transmit into freight costs, hedging needs, and foreign-investment risk premiums across sectors.

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Domestic Supply And Export Controls

Damage to refineries and export terminals is pushing Moscow to consider measures such as renewed gasoline export bans to protect the domestic market. Such interventions can abruptly disrupt product availability, pricing, and fulfillment for industrial users, distributors, and regional supply chains tied to Russia.

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War Economy Crowds Out Investment

Defense and security spending dominate federal finances, with protected items including 12.9 trillion rubles for defense limiting room for civilian priorities. Infrastructure, road building, and national projects remain exposed, raising medium-term risks for market development, logistics quality, and private investment returns.

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Petrochemical Feedstock Supply Stress

Naphtha shortages are disrupting core industrial inputs for chemicals, semiconductors and manufacturing. Korea banned naphtha exports for five months, while LG Chem shut an 800,000-ton annual cracker and emergency Russian imports of 27,000 tons offered only a short-lived buffer.

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Sanctions Evasion Sustains Exports

Despite sanctions and conflict, Iran continues exporting about 1.6-2.8 million barrels per day through shadow fleets, transponder suppression, ship-to-ship transfers, and shell-company finance. This entrenches legal, reputational, and enforcement risks for traders, insurers, refiners, banks, and logistics providers.

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Industrial Cost Pass-Through Stress

Surging naphtha and energy costs are disrupting petrochemicals, steel, construction materials, and other basic industries, with some firms unable to pass increases onto customers. Smaller manufacturers are especially exposed, raising risks of margin compression, delayed deliveries, and supplier financial strain.

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Manufacturing Scale-Up and Localization

India continues to deepen industrial policy support for electronics, capital goods, batteries, and strategic manufacturing through targeted tax relief, customs reductions, and production incentives. For multinationals, this expands local sourcing opportunities but also raises expectations around domestic value addition and localization.

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Privatization And SOE Reforms Advance

Pakistan is accelerating state-owned enterprise reform and privatization under IMF pressure, while also intensifying anti-corruption and regulatory reforms. This could open selective investment opportunities in energy and infrastructure, but execution risk, political resistance and policy inconsistency remain material for foreign entrants.

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Export Controls Drive Tech Decoupling

US policy increasingly links trade to national security through tighter controls on semiconductors, advanced technology, and strategic investment. For multinationals, this accelerates technology bifurcation, complicates market access, licensing, R&D collaboration, and supplier qualification across electronics, AI, and industrial sectors.

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Middle East Conflict Spillovers

Regional war dynamics are feeding market outflows, higher energy bills and weaker investor sentiment. The central bank estimates a 10% supply-side oil shock could cut growth by 0.4-0.7 points, while uncertainty dampens investment, consumption, tourism and export demand.

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Sanctions Enforcement Shapes Trade Risks

Sanctions on Russia remain central to Ukraine’s commercial environment, but evasion through third countries and imported components still sustains Russian military production. Companies trading across the region face heightened compliance, end-use screening and reputational risks tied to dual-use goods and logistics networks.

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Lelepa Resort ESG Contestation

Royal Caribbean’s planned Lelepa private beach development, designed for up to 5,000 visitors daily and targeted for 2027, faces community objections over environmental assessments and cultural heritage risks. This raises permitting, reputational, legal, and stakeholder-management challenges for cruise-linked investment.

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Battery Supply Chain Repositioning

Korea’s battery industry is shifting from pure product competition toward supply-chain localization, raw-material sourcing, recycling, and expansion into energy storage and AI infrastructure. US IRA and EU CRMA rules are reshaping manufacturing footprints, partnership choices, and long-term investment strategy.

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Shipping Routes Face Disruption

Thai exporters are avoiding Red Sea routes, adding 10-20 days to transit times and increasing logistics costs by 20%-40%. Businesses are diversifying markets and raising buffer stocks, but prolonged disruption would weaken delivery reliability, working capital efficiency, and export competitiveness.