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:
Mislabeling raises customs exposure
EU discussions highlight persistent mislabeling and mixing of settlement goods with products made inside Israel, exposing importers and manufacturers to higher due-diligence burdens, customs disputes, shipment seizures, and reputational damage if provenance controls and supplier verification remain inadequate.
Industrial parks face leasing sensitivity
Because the US absorbed $86.5 billion of Vietnamese exports in the first half and generated a $75.3 billion surplus for Vietnam, tariff uncertainty is expected to affect industrial-park leasing demand. Export-oriented manufacturers may delay expansion, affecting real estate, logistics, and supplier investment decisions.
Japanese capital shifts to India
Japan is pairing geopolitical de-risking with large-scale commercial commitment to India, including previously announced JPY 10 trillion in private investment plans and broad corporate participation. The trend supports India’s role as an export hub and alternative base for manufacturing, infrastructure, and innovation.
Market access tensions intensify
Foreign businesses face renewed friction over asymmetric market openness, with EU negotiators pressing China on shrinking European market share, intellectual property and barriers to entry. The dispute is becoming a core determinant of investment screening, partner selection and expansion strategy.
Tourism Recalibration Toward Quality Visitors
Thailand cut visa-free stays from 60 to 30 days, tightened visa rules, and deployed AI surveillance to target overstays and 'grey' businesses, prioritizing higher-spending tourists over volume. With arrivals below pre-pandemic 39 million and Russian visitors nearing records, the pivot reshapes a pillar sector, affecting hospitality and aviation.
Critical Minerals Alliance and Supply Chains
Canada is positioning as the West's alternative to China in critical minerals, anchoring a G7 Resilience Alliance targeting under-60% single-supplier dependence by 2030. Over $5 billion in new partnerships unlocks mining, processing and stockpiling investment opportunities for international firms.
Defense exports reshape industry
Japan’s easing of defense export restrictions and its first co-development project with India on naval communications technology indicate a broader industrial shift. This opens new opportunities in dual-use manufacturing, maintenance, and technology partnerships, while also raising geopolitical and compliance considerations for suppliers.
Weak Domestic Demand and Deflation
China faces its first retail sales decline since 2022, nearly three years of deflation, and a $18tn property wealth loss. Weak consumption, youth unemployment and shrinking births constrain the market, pushing Beijing to rely on exports rather than internal rebalancing.
Escalating Sanctions on Shadow Fleet
The UK imposed 70 new sanctions targeting Russia's shadow fleet, LNG carriers, marine insurers, and military procurement, surpassing 600 sanctioned vessels. It seized a tanker and pressed G7 partners, signaling intensifying enforcement against sanctioned energy and finance flows.
Financial Services Regulation Reform Debate
Kemi Badenoch proposes scrapping ring-fencing, cutting bank capital requirements, and replacing the FCA to unlock £450 billion of investment, arguing the City is overregulated. The incoming Burnham government signals possible higher bank levies and tougher wealth taxes.
Green infrastructure partnerships grow
Foreign-backed sustainability projects are advancing, illustrated by a $74 million Japanese-Vietnamese waste-to-energy plant in Bac Ninh processing 500 tons daily and generating 11.6 MW. Such projects indicate growing openings in climate infrastructure, carbon reduction technologies and environmentally compliant industrial development.
Critical minerals and technology alignment
Trade negotiations are increasingly linked to cooperation in AI, quantum computing, semiconductors, space and critical minerals. Emerging plans envision India anchoring processing and sourcing while the US provides capital and technology, potentially strengthening investment inflows and diversification away from China-linked supply dependencies.
Digital Payments Interoperability Advancing
Indonesia is moving toward integration of India’s UPI with its domestic payment system, alongside broader digital public infrastructure cooperation. For international companies, faster cross-border retail payments and lower transaction friction could improve tourism, consumer services and SME commerce across the corridor.
Japan investment surge accelerates
Japan-India summit outcomes dominate recent business news, with more than 150 Japanese firms announcing roughly $12.5 billion and about ₹1 trillion in projects across manufacturing, semiconductors, clean energy, finance and digital infrastructure, materially strengthening India’s inbound investment and industrial supply-chain capacity.
Elite divisions complicate policy
Reporting indicates deep splits among Iranian elites between pragmatists backing diplomacy and hardliners resisting accommodation with Washington. This weakens policy coherence, complicates implementation of any agreement, and increases the chance that domestic political struggles disrupt business conditions or foreign economic engagement.
Energy Security Vulnerability Deepens
Japan imports 94% of crude from the Middle East via the Strait of Hormuz, leaving it acutely exposed after the US-Iran war. Nearly half of firms expect over six months to normalize. Tokyo launched the $10 billion POWERR Asia initiative and seeks supply diversification.
Auto content rules may tighten
US proposals would raise North American and specifically US automotive content requirements, including a reported 50% US-made threshold. That could upend established Canada-US-Mexico supply chains, raise compliance costs, and shift future assembly and component investment decisions.
Security regulation hits Chinese firms
China-related business exposure is increasingly shaped by security-led regulation rather than pure trade policy. Proposed EU cybersecurity and industrial measures, alongside US military-link designations, could exclude Chinese companies from telecom, solar, procurement and contractor ecosystems, affecting joint ventures and vendors.
Local-currency settlement expands
Indonesia and India welcomed operational progress on local-currency transaction guidelines between their central banks. Wider non-dollar settlement could reduce foreign-exchange exposure, ease bilateral trade financing and encourage cross-border investment, particularly for firms managing thin margins or volatile currency conditions.
Persistent Russia compliance exposure
Türkiye’s continuing entanglement with Russian defense and energy links remains a material business factor, visible in the S-400 dispute and Blue Stream dependence. Companies operating in or through Türkiye should expect ongoing sanctions-screening, compliance diligence and reputational assessment around Russia-connected transactions.
Fuel Crisis From Refinery Strikes
Ukrainian drone strikes have knocked ~30% of Russian refining capacity offline, cutting fuel output 25% and triggering rationing across 75% of regions. Russia is importing gasoline from India, Kazakhstan and Belarus, disrupting logistics, agriculture and business operations nationwide.
Power expansion and nuclear
Vietnam is accelerating long-term power capacity expansion, including selection of a foreign partner by Q3 for the 3.2 GW Ninh Thuan 2 nuclear plant. Technology-transfer requirements of at least 30% and sub-3% financing targets shape opportunities for foreign investors and suppliers.
Vision 2030 Diversification Momentum
Saudi Arabia advances non-oil growth through tourism, mining, logistics, and technology, ranking 13th in IMD competitiveness 2026. The IMF affirmed economic resilience. Giga-projects like NEOM, Red Sea, and Diriyah continue, creating broad opportunities across construction, services, and industry.
Red Sea export hubs gain prominence
During Hormuz disruption, Saudi rerouted crude and fuel oil through Yanbu on the Red Sea, with June fuel-oil exports from Yanbu exceeding 300,000 tons. This reinforces western-coast ports as critical contingency nodes for energy exports and related supply-chain investments.
Chinese competition pressures German exports
EU officials warn subsidized Chinese EVs now exceed 15% of Europe’s electrified vehicle segment, while German manufacturers lose share and run plants below capacity. This intensifies pricing pressure, raises layoff risks, and complicates long-term production and sourcing decisions.
CPEC 2.0 shifts investment focus
Pakistan and China are launching CPEC 2.0 with emphasis on industrialization, agriculture, IT, mining and human resource development. This signals fresh project opportunities, but investors will still weigh delivery capacity, security conditions and political execution risks.
Bilateral trade talks intensify
Brasília is racing to avert or soften US measures through repeated talks with USTR, a formal rebuttal, and a negotiated ‘roadmap’ covering digital trade, ethanol, intellectual property, anti-corruption, and deforestation, creating policy uncertainty for cross-border investors.
Supply Chain De-risking Accelerates
China’s major trading partners are moving from debate to implementation on de-risking. Proposed EU diversification mechanisms and US legislation to reduce dependence on Chinese critical-mineral processing indicate rising pressure on multinationals to regionalize sourcing, qualify backup suppliers, and stress-test exposure to geopolitical disruption.
Regional Realignment and New Saudi-Led Bloc
A Saudi-led grouping with Qatar, Egypt, Pakistan, and Turkey has emerged to contain Iran and Israel, while the Riyadh-Abu Dhabi rift deepens amid competition for foreign investment. This realignment reshapes regional trade corridors, security partnerships, and market-leadership dynamics.
High Interest Rates Constrain Growth
The Selic sits at 14.25% with inflation at 4.8-5%, above the 4.5% ceiling. GDP growth is modest (~2%), investment weak at 16.5% of GDP. Central bank caution and election-year fiscal expansion keep borrowing costs elevated, discouraging private capital formation and expansion.
Trade deal diplomacy intensifies
Hanoi is pushing to conclude a reciprocal, fair and balanced trade agreement with Washington while preserving the broader Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. For exporters and investors, negotiations now directly shape tariff exposure, market access, compliance obligations and the operating outlook for US-oriented manufacturing.
Autumn Elections and Political Uncertainty
Elections due by October 2026 show Netanyahu's bloc trailing, with Eisenkot's Yashar and the Lapid-Bennett Together alliance gaining. Coalition instability, Haredi conscription disputes, and US-Israel friction create policy uncertainty affecting regulatory and investment climates.
Digital payments integration advances
Progress on linking India’s UPI with Indonesia’s payment system and cross-border QR payments would streamline travel, retail transactions and SME commerce. For international businesses, deeper payment interoperability can reduce transaction costs, support tourism demand and improve digital-market access for smaller suppliers.
Defence industrial cooperation broadens
The first Japan-India defence co-development project, the UNICORN naval antenna system, marks a notable expansion of industrial and maritime-security cooperation. While defence-specific, it reinforces supply-chain alignment, technology transfer channels and the strategic importance of Indo-Pacific shipping routes for commercial operators.
Danantara Single-Gate Export Monopoly
State-owned PT DSI became sole exporter of coal, palm oil and ferro alloy (US$66bn, 23% of exports) from June 2026, full rollout January 2027. The WTO-sensitive policy aims to curb under-invoicing but raises concerns over hidden protectionism, state capture, and added compliance burdens.
UK and EU FTAs Open Major Markets
India-UK CETA enters force July 15, granting duty-free access on 99% of exports and projected £25.5bn trade gains. The India-EU FTA, covering 93% of exports, is set for December signing and early-2027 rollout, broadening market access for textiles, pharma, and engineering.