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:
Domestic instability and regulatory unpredictability
Economic stress and political crackdowns heighten operational disruption risk, including abrupt import controls, licensing changes, and enforcement actions. Foreign firms confront higher ESG and reputational exposure, labor volatility, and difficulty securing reliable local partners, contracts, and dispute resolution.
Shipbuilding and LNG carrier upcycle
Korean yards are securing high-value LNG carrier orders, supported by IMO emissions rules and rising LNG project activity, with multi-year backlogs and improving profitability. This benefits industrial suppliers and financiers, while tightening shipyard capacity and delivery slots through 2028–2029.
Consolidation budgétaire et fiscalité
Le budget 2026, adopté via 49.3, comporte des mesures fiscales contestées et sécurisées devant le Conseil constitutionnel. Effets: incertitude sur fiscalité du capital et transmissions, arbitrages d’investissement, pression sur dépenses publiques et commandes.
E-Auto-Förderung und Autowandel
Die Regierung reaktiviert E-Auto-Subventionen (1.500–6.000 €, ca. 3 Mrd. €, bis zu 800.000 Fahrzeuge). Das stabilisiert Nachfrage, beeinflusst Flottenentscheidungen und Zulieferketten. Gleichzeitig verschärfen EU-Klimaziele und Konkurrenz aus China Preisdruck, Lokalisierung und Technologietransfer-Debatten.
Suez Canal revenues and FX inflows
Canal receipts are recovering: 2026 YTD revenue reached $449m from 1,315 ships, up from $368m a year earlier, with tonnage up sharply. Recovery boosts hard-currency inflows, yet remains exposed to renewed Red Sea escalation and carrier routing decisions.
Baht volatility and FX scrutiny
Election risk premia, USD strength, and gold-linked flows are driving short-term baht swings. The central bank is signalling greater operational FX management and scrutiny of non-fundamental inflows. Importers, exporters, and treasury teams should expect hedging costs and tighter FX documentation.
Critical minerals re-shoring push
Canberra is accelerating onshore processing and ‘strategic reserve’ policies for critical minerals, backed by allied frameworks and subsidies. Recent antimony shipments highlight momentum, while lithium refining faces cost pressure. Expect incentives, permitting scrutiny, and partner-linked offtake deals.
Bahn-Modernisierung belastet Logistik
Sanierungen zentraler Korridore und Verzögerungen im Bauprogramm sowie Restrukturierung bei DB Cargo (geplante 6.000 Stellenabbau bis 2030) erhöhen kurzfristig Störungsrisiken für Schiene/Intermodal. Unternehmen müssen mit längeren Laufzeiten, Umroutungen und höheren Transportkosten rechnen.
Economic-security industrial policy intensifies
Taiwan is deepening “economic security” cooperation with partners, prioritizing trusted supply chains in AI, chips, drones, and critical inputs. This favors vetted vendors and data-governance discipline, but increases screening, documentation, and resilience requirements for cross-border projects and M&A.
Indo-Pacific security reshapes logistics
AUKUS and expanded US submarine rotations at HMAS Stirling from 2027 (Australia investing ~A$5.6b plus A$8.4b nearby) heighten geopolitical risk around regional sea lanes. Shipping, insurance, and dual-use supply chains should plan for contingency routing and compliance.
Immigration crackdown labor tightness
Intensified enforcement is reducing foreign-born employment and discouraging participation, with estimates that 200,000 to over 1 million immigrants stopped working. Key sectors (agriculture, construction, services) face labor shortages, wage pressure, and slower demand growth in affected local economies.
Cyber defense and compliance tightening
Japan is strengthening “active cyberdefense” institutions and pushing tougher security expectations, including in financial and critical infrastructure segments. Multinationals should anticipate higher incident-reporting, supplier security audits, and operational resilience requirements across Japan-based networks.
Fiscal pressure and policy credibility
Debt and deficits remain sensitive under President Prabowo, with discussion of balancing the budget while funding costly signature programs. Markets may reprice sovereign risk if deficits drift toward the 3% legal cap, affecting rates, FX stability, and public-procurement pipelines.
USMCA review and exit risk
With a mandatory July 1 review, the White House is reportedly weighing USMCA withdrawal while seeking tougher rules of origin, critical-minerals coordination, and anti-dumping. Heightened uncertainty threatens North American integrated supply chains, automotive planning, and cross-border investment confidence.
Vision 2030 investment recalibration
Saudi Arabia is resetting Vision 2030: the $925bn PIF shifts its 2026–2030 strategy toward industry, minerals, AI and tourism while re-scoping mega-projects (e.g., parts of NEOM). This changes procurement pipelines, financing availability, and partner selection for foreign investors.
BoJ normalization lifts funding costs
The Bank of Japan’s cautious tightening bias—policy rate lifted to 0.75% in December and markets pricing further hikes—raises borrowing costs and may reprice real estate and equities. Firms should revisit capex hurdle rates, refinancing timelines, and counterparty risk.
Allied defence-industrial deepening (AUKUS)
AUKUS-related procurement and wider defence modernisation continue to reshape industrial partnerships, technology controls and security vetting. Suppliers in shipbuilding, cyber, advanced manufacturing and dual-use tech may see growth, but face stricter export controls, sovereignty requirements and compliance burdens.
Taiwan’s US investment guarantees expand
Taipei is backing outbound investment with government credit guarantees, potentially up to $250B, to support semiconductor and ICT supply-chain projects in the US. This lowers financing risk for firms expanding overseas, but may intensify domestic political scrutiny and execution constraints.
Energy exports and infrastructure constraints
Canada remains a major energy supplier, yet pipeline, LNG, and power-transmission buildout is politically and regulatory complex. This affects long-term contracts and project timelines. Buyers and investors should diversify routes, build flexibility into contracts, and model permitting delays.
EU trade defense and carbon measures
France supports tougher EU trade defense and climate-linked border measures (e.g., CBAM) amid tensions over Chinese industrial overcapacity. Businesses should expect more customs friction, documentation burdens for embedded carbon, and greater tariff/sanctions uncertainty in China-facing supply chains.
BRICS payments push sanctions exposure
Brazil’s joint statement with Russia criticising unilateral sanctions and promoting local-currency settlement comes as bilateral trade reached US$10.9bn in 2025. Firms must strengthen sanctions screening, banking counterparties and shipping/insurance checks to avoid secondary-sanctions and compliance disruptions.
EIB Lending Returns, Project Pipeline
The gradual resumption of European Investment Bank operations—reported with €200m earmarked for renewable energy—signals improving European financing access. This can catalyze infrastructure, green industrial upgrades and supplier capacity expansion, while raising compliance expectations on procurement, ESG and governance standards.
Energy diversification and LNG buildout
Turkey is expanding LNG and regasification capacity, planning additional FSRU projects and targeting ~200 million m³/day intake within two years. Long-term LNG contracting (including U.S.-sourced volumes) can improve supply security, but price volatility and infrastructure bottlenecks remain.
Tariff volatility as negotiation tool
The administration is using tariff threats—up to 100% on Canadian goods and shifting rates for key partners—as leverage in broader negotiations. This raises landed-cost uncertainty, complicates pricing and contracting, and incentivizes nearshoring, dual sourcing, and inventory buffers for import-dependent firms.
Energy security and LNG logistics
PGN began supplying LNG cargoes from Tangguh Papua to the FSRU Jawa Barat, supporting power and industrial demand with distribution capacity up to 100 MMSCFD. Greater LNG reliance improves near-term supply resilience, but exposes users to shipping, price-indexation, and infrastructure bottlenecks.
Local government debt tightening
Provincial reports signal stricter controls on “hidden” local debt, platform exits, and goals to clear stock by 2026, reinforcing Beijing’s ‘no new implicit debt’ stance. Expect slower infrastructure pipelines, tougher public procurement terms, and heightened scrutiny of SOE financing structures.
Budget-linked import controls, classification
Budget 2026 adds 44 new eight‑digit tariff lines to monitor sensitive imports (including battery separators and refrigerated containers), improving enforcement and analytics. For multinationals, tighter HS classification increases customs documentation burden, audit risk, and potential for targeted safeguard actions.
Oil exports via shadow fleet
Iran sustains crude exports through opaque “dark fleet” logistics, ship-to-ship transfers, and transponder manipulation, with China absorbing most volumes. Intensifying interdictions and seizures increase freight, insurance, and counterparty risk, threatening sudden disruption for traders, refiners, and shippers.
Fiscalización digital y aduanas
El SAT intensifica auditorías basadas en CFDI y cruces automatizados, priorizando “factureras”, subvaluación y comercio exterior. Se reporta enfoque en aduanas (27,1% de ingresos tributarios) y nuevas facultades/visitas rápidas, elevando riesgos de bloqueo operativo, devoluciones y multas.
External debt rollovers, FX buffers
Pakistan’s reliance on short-term bilateral rollovers and Chinese commercial loans keeps reserves fragile; a recent $700m repayment cut gross reserves to about $15.5bn. Tight buffers raise devaluation risk, restrict profit repatriation and disrupt import-dependent supply chains.
Tariff volatility and legal shifts
Supreme Court invalidation of IEEPA-based tariffs and the administration’s pivot to a temporary 10–15% Section 122 global surcharge increase short-term pricing uncertainty, refund litigation risk, and contract renegotiations for importers, exporters, and firms with tariff-indexed supply agreements.
Power-demand surge from AI buildout
Rising electricity demand from data centers and semiconductor fabs is explicitly cited in LNG procurement plans. This increases exposure to grid constraints, permitting timelines, and power-price volatility, influencing site selection, capex schedules, and long-term PPAs for foreign investors.
Border logistics and bridge uncertainty
U.S. threats to delay the Gordie Howe Detroit–Windsor bridge—despite its strategic role in a corridor handling about $126B in truck trade value—add operational risk. Firms should plan for border congestion, routing redundancy, and potential policy-linked disruptions at ports of entry.
Privacy, surveillance and AI compliance
Regulatory updates are accelerating: Alberta is modernizing its private-sector privacy law after constitutional findings, and Ontario is advancing work on deepfakes and workplace surveillance. Multinationals should expect tighter consent, monitoring, and data-governance obligations affecting HR and digital operations.
FCA enforcement transparency escalation
The FCA’s new Enforcement Watch increases near-real-time visibility of investigations and emphasises individual accountability, Consumer Duty “fair value”, governance and controls. Online brokers and platforms should expect faster supervisory escalation and higher reputational and remediation costs.
Manufacturing incentives and localization
India continues industrial policy via PLI-style incentives and strategic missions spanning electronics, textiles, chemicals, and MSMEs. International manufacturers should evaluate local value-add requirements, supplier development, and potential WTO challenges, especially in autos and clean tech.