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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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Energy shocks expose vulnerability

Multiple articles note Britain’s exposure to imported natural gas and recent geopolitical energy shocks, including spillovers from Middle East conflict. This keeps electricity pricing and operating costs sensitive to external events, complicating budgeting for manufacturers and logistics operators.

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Semiconductor and High-Tech Hub Ambitions

Vietnam is prioritizing semiconductors, microchips, and AI, with Bac Ninh (2025 GRDP +10.27%, $5.73bn FDI) slated as a chip hub and Hanoi zones targeting high-tech R&D. US lawmakers discussed developing Vietnamese rare earths to bypass China-dependent supply chains.

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Peso Pressure and Currency Volatility

The peso depreciated roughly 0.29-0.31% to 17.53 per dollar following the non-renewal announcement, reflecting market sensitivity to trade uncertainty, though Q1 2026 FDI reached a record $23.6 billion signaling underlying investor confidence.

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Pipeline Revival Reshapes Energy Costs

The Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline has returned to the policy agenda as sanctions relief becomes plausible. With the 781km Pakistani segment still unfinished, projected gas savings of 35-40% versus LNG could materially improve industrial competitiveness, fertilizer production, and power reliability.

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USMCA Renewal Uncertainty Deepens

Washington declined to renew USMCA in its current form, triggering annual reviews until 2036. With trilateral trade having risen from $1.07 trillion in 2020 to $1.63 trillion in 2024, manufacturers face prolonged uncertainty over tariffs, market access and cross-border investment planning.

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US Trade Deal Enforcement and Coupang Dispute

A US House report accuses Seoul of discriminating against American firms like Coupang (fined $410M), alleging violations of the 2025 trade deal that included $350B in Korean investment commitments, raising renewed tariff scrutiny and regulatory-risk concerns for investors.

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Energy Security And Fuel Reform

Cabinet approved a strategic petroleum stocks policy targeting reserves equal to 60 days of net imports, rising to 90 days over time. Meanwhile, authorities launched a fuel-price formula review and R17.2 billion in relief, affecting logistics costs and downstream investment planning.

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Large-scale US procurement commitments

India has signalled willingness to purchase major volumes of US goods, including energy, aircraft, technology products, precious metals and coal, with figures cited up to USD 500 billion over five years. This could redirect procurement flows and influence capital allocation across sectors.

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Expanding CPEC 2.0 With China

Pakistan seeks broader Chinese cooperation under CPEC 2.0 across agriculture, IT, industry, special economic zones, and mining, alongside Karakoram Highway realignment and defence ties—reinforcing dependence on China's 'all-weather' strategic and financial support.

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Workforce and skills mobility rises

Recent agreements emphasize cross-border talent pipelines, including plans to bring 500 skilled AI professionals into Japan by 2030 and broader training initiatives, underscoring labor-market pressures and the growing business importance of international recruitment, localization, and technical skills availability.

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Rare Earth Supply Chain Vulnerability

China controls roughly 90% of rare earth processing and permanent magnets, weaponizing export controls that already cause German production delays. Reliance on Chinese inputs for autos, defense, and chemicals creates strategic chokepoints; building alternative supply chains could take up to a decade.

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Industrial Overcapacity Driving Frictions

Multiple reports link Chinese industrial overcapacity to worsening trade tensions, especially in autos, steel, chemicals, and machinery. For international firms, this can mean lower import prices in the short term but higher medium-term exposure to anti-dumping actions, retaliatory measures, and abrupt market distortions.

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Export controls diverge further

The new consolidated dual-use open general export licence simplifies compliance and could save more than 500 annual applications, while adding destinations such as South Korea and Singapore. However, tighter customs declaration requirements and growing divergence from EU frameworks increase operational complexity for exporters.

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Supply-chain exemption lobbying grows

Brazilian exporters and major US companies including Coca-Cola, Tesla, Nestlé, eBay, Siemens, and others are pressing for product exemptions, warning tariffs would disrupt supply chains, raise US input costs, and undermine manufacturing and consumer markets on both sides.

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Defense industry scaling rapidly

Ukraine’s defense sector is attracting fresh capital and policy support, with targets to raise investment 75% this year and produce 7 million drones versus 2.2 million in 2024. The sector is becoming a major industrial growth area with implications for suppliers, investors and manufacturing partners.

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Global Shippers Recommit Cautiously

Maersk said it will expand investment in Egypt and resume services through the Suez Canal with Hapag-Lloyd after reassessing Red Sea security. For investors and exporters, this signals improving confidence, though maritime planning still depends heavily on regional stability.

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Afghanistan tensions disrupt trade

Pakistan-Afghanistan relations have deteriorated sharply, with border closures, airstrikes and militant safe-haven accusations. One report cites about $1.1 billion in Pakistani export losses, while worsening insecurity is obstructing transit trade, regional connectivity and cross-border logistics planning.

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US Tariff Escalation Risk

Washington may impose additional 25% and 12.5% duties on Brazilian goods by July 15 under Section 301 and forced-labor probes. Industry estimates 4,187 products worth US$14.9 billion could be affected, threatening exports, contracts, pricing and bilateral supply chains.

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Border upgrades reshape trade

South Africa has launched a R12.5 billion public-private redevelopment of six major land ports handling over 80% of land-border trade and passenger flows. Faster clearance and upgraded infrastructure could improve regional supply chains, while transitional implementation may disrupt cross-border logistics.

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Green supply chain opportunities

Australian officials identified education, agriculture and food, tourism, and the green energy supply chain as priority sectors for deeper India engagement. For international firms, this signals opportunities in renewable inputs, logistics, project development, and downstream manufacturing linked to energy transition demand.

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Energy price volatility threatens industry

Recent power-market swings highlighted severe volatility, with German electricity prices reportedly moving from near zero to €747 per megawatt-hour and around 40 instances above €300/MWh in one week. This raises operating risk for energy-intensive manufacturing, logistics, data centers and long-term investment planning.

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Nominee ownership enforcement tightening

Thailand ordered nationwide inspections of suspected nominee landholdings after concerns over Chinese-linked purchases in the Eastern Economic Corridor for illegal industrial estates. Tougher enforcement may improve investor confidence and legal clarity, but raises compliance scrutiny for foreign-linked property and industrial investments.

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Russian Energy Dependence Deepens

India imported a record 4.93 million barrels per day of crude in June, including about 2.6 million from Russia. Discounted Russian supply supports refiners’ margins, but sanctions exposure, payment complexity and infrastructure attacks create ongoing compliance and continuity risks.

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Policy reforms favor private sector

Government statements highlighted tax and investment reforms aimed at improving the business climate, including allowing private-sector health insurance contributions to be deducted from taxable income. These measures, alongside broader structural reforms, may modestly improve cost structures and sentiment.

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AI and digital infrastructure expand

New international cooperation frameworks on AI, data infrastructure, cybersecurity, and trusted digital systems indicate growing commercial opportunities for Japanese firms in multilingual models, industrial AI, and data-center ecosystems, while increasing the strategic importance of compute, chips, and regulatory alignment.

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Resilient Growth Amid Downgrades

India remains the fastest-growing major economy, with Q4 FY26 GDP at 7.8%. FY27 forecasts moderated to 6.5-6.8% (IMF, Goldman, S&P) amid energy stress, weak monsoon, and global headwinds, though strong domestic demand and $700 billion reserves provide buffers.

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Diplomatic Windfall From US-Iran Mediation

Pakistan's brokering of US-Iran peace elevated its standing with Washington, London, Gulf states, and Iran, potentially unlocking foreign investment, trade access, and regional integration—though analysts stress gains depend on structural reforms, not goodwill.

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Tariff exposure hits core sectors

Recent reporting shows continuing tariff pressure on Mexican autos, steel, and aluminum, alongside discussion of a possible 15% global auto tariff with lower rates for compliant producers. These measures threaten margins, pricing strategies, and export competitiveness for Mexico-based manufacturers.

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Shipping Recovery Still Fragile

Although Saudi exports through Hormuz recovered to 34 million barrels between June 17 and July 1, vessel traffic remains below pre-war norms and war-risk concerns persist. Businesses should expect continued insurance, freight, and delivery-risk pressure across Gulf-linked supply chains.

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US Tariff Threats Escalate

Pretoria is lobbying Washington against proposed new US tariffs tied to alleged gaps in forced-labour import prohibitions. If imposed, South African automotive, agriculture and mining exports would become less competitive, threatening jobs, export earnings and broader US market access certainty.

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US Sanctions Relief, Defense Reopening

Erdogan and Trump signal will to lift CAATSA sanctions, with potential F-35 delivery and $700m F110 engine sales for KAAN jets. Removal would ease defense-sector constraints and unlock major deals, though congressional approval remains uncertain.

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Critical minerals diversification drive

Japan’s heavy dependence on Chinese rare earths, cited at roughly 70% in one report, has sharpened urgency around alternative critical-mineral supply chains. Businesses in autos, electronics, batteries, and defense-linked sectors face renewed incentives to diversify inputs and build strategic inventory resilience.

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US Demands Threaten Auto Supply Chains

Washington seeks 50% US-specific vehicle content, pushing regional thresholds toward 82%, plus tighter rules of origin. Only 1-in-5 Canadian/Mexican cars would currently qualify; compliance could raise vehicle costs 5-7% and force production shifts southward.

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Pipeline bypass expansion gains urgency

Riyadh is considering expanding the East-West pipeline by up to 2 million bpd, potentially accommodating neighboring producers too. If advanced, the multibillion-dollar project would reduce Hormuz dependence, reshape regional export routes and redirect infrastructure, storage and logistics investment priorities.

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Booming Tech, AI and Defense Exports

Despite war, the TA-125 index rose 35%+, defense exports hit a record $19.2bn (up 30%), and 2025 saw $15bn tech investment plus $70bn cyber exits. Europe still buys 36% of Israeli arms, signaling resilient high-value sectors.

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Oil sanctions snapback risk

Washington revoked a temporary license allowing Iranian crude and petrochemical sales, banning new transactions after July 7 and allowing wind-down only until July 17. The reversal directly threatens energy trade, shipping contracts, payment channels, and counterparties exposed to Iranian cargoes.