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:
Higher-for-Longer Rate Risk
The Federal Reserve is holding rates at 3.5%-3.75% as inflation risks rise from energy and shipping costs. With April unemployment at 4.3% and gasoline near $4.55 per gallon, financing costs, dollar dynamics, and capital allocation remain key business variables.
China-Linked FDI Screening Eases
India has fast-tracked approvals within 60 days for 40 manufacturing sub-sectors while preserving Indian control and stricter disclosures for China-linked capital. The shift supports batteries, electronics and rare earths, but keeps security and ownership compliance burdens high.
Middle East Shock Transmission
Conflict-driven disruption in the Middle East is feeding into Germany through higher fuel and industrial energy prices, logistics costs, and supply bottlenecks. These external shocks are worsening inflation pressures, depressing business sentiment, and complicating sourcing, transport, and pricing strategies across sectors.
Project Approvals Being Accelerated
Ottawa is moving to cap federal major-project reviews at one year, expand one-project-one-review processes and create economic zones. Faster approvals could unlock pipelines, power, mining and transport infrastructure, improving investor visibility, although legal, environmental and Indigenous consultation risks remain material.
Hormuz Transit Control Escalates
Iran’s de facto control of Hormuz, with vetting, checkpoints, delays and reported passage fees, is severely disrupting a route that normally carries about one-fifth of global oil. Shippers face higher insurance, sanctions exposure, rerouting costs, and operational uncertainty.
Tourism And Aviation Scale-Up
Tourism reached $178 billion in 2025, around 46% of the Middle East total, with roughly 123 million domestic and international tourists. Hospitality, aviation, events and retail suppliers benefit, though execution demands in labor, infrastructure and service quality are intensifying.
Advanced Packaging Bottlenecks
CoWoS and OSAT capacity remain structurally tight even as TSMC targets 130,000-140,000 wafers monthly by end-2026. Packaging constraints are delaying deliveries, increasing capex and pushing customers toward alternative providers, affecting lead times for AI, automotive and high-performance computing products.
China Exposure and De-risking Dilemma
German companies remain deeply exposed to China for sales, sourcing, and critical raw materials. While 61% of surveyed firms plan higher China investment, many report damage from US-China and EU-China trade tensions, export controls, and elevated logistics costs linked to regional conflict.
US-China Policy Transaction Risk
Recent Trump-Xi talks revived concern that Taiwan-related arms sales, tariffs and technology restrictions could become bargaining variables. For businesses, this creates planning uncertainty around sanctions, market access, export controls and procurement decisions tied to US-China strategic competition.
UK Sanctions-Regulation Volatility
Recent adjustments to Russia-related restrictions, alongside broader tightening elsewhere, show a more fluid UK regulatory environment during geopolitical shocks. International companies should prepare for rapid licensing changes, enhanced due diligence demands, and sudden compliance recalibration across trade, shipping, insurance, and procurement activities.
Productivity and Regulatory Reform
The federal budget includes reforms expected to cut regulatory costs by A$10.2 billion annually and lift long-run GDP by about A$13 billion. Measures include tariff removals, faster approvals, foreign-investment streamlining and digital-ID expansion, improving Australia’s medium-term operating environment.
Electronics Export and Rewiring
Exports remain a bright spot, with March shipments up 18.7% year on year to $35.16 billion, led by electronics, AI-related products and data-centre equipment. Thailand is benefiting from supply-chain diversification, strengthening its role in regional electronics, PCB and component manufacturing.
Data center growth meets opposition
France is attracting large AI and data-center projects, including major foreign-backed investments, but land use, electricity demand and environmental objections are intensifying. Permitting friction, local resistance and infrastructure constraints may complicate digital-capacity expansion despite strong state backing for technological sovereignty.
Weak Growth, Export Dependence
Thailand’s economy remains fragile, with first-quarter 2026 growth estimated at 2.2% year on year and the central bank cutting its 2026 forecast to 1.5%. Strong electronics exports are offsetting weak consumption and tourism, increasing exposure to external demand shocks.
Capital Controls and Financial Tightening
Beijing tightened restrictions on offshore stock-trading platforms after unlicensed capital outflows reportedly reached $1.04 trillion last year. The campaign signals stronger capital-account enforcement, greater scrutiny of cross-border financial channels, and potential pressure on foreign listings, portfolio flows, and investor exit flexibility.
Slowing Growth and Cost Pressures
Russia has sharply downgraded growth expectations while inflation, high interest rates, labor shortages, and war spending intensify domestic strain. For investors and operators, this weakens consumer demand, raises financing and wage costs, and increases the likelihood of policy intervention or fiscal extraction.
Judicial reform clouds certainty
Judicial reform and its possible revision are reinforcing investor concerns over rule of law, institutional stability, and contract enforcement. Reports linking weak confidence to frozen investment and a 0.8% first-quarter economic contraction raise the risk premium for long-term manufacturing and infrastructure commitments.
Semiconductor Supercycle Drives Trade
AI-led semiconductor demand is powering South Korea’s export engine, with April chip exports reaching $31.9 billion, up 173.5% year on year. The boom lifts growth, investment and trade surpluses, but increases concentration risk for suppliers, investors and industrial customers.
Alberta Political Cohesion Risk
Alberta separatist pressures have eased temporarily after court intervention, but federal-provincial tensions still shape energy and regulatory policy. For international business, renewed constitutional friction could complicate approvals, infrastructure planning, labor mobility, and perceptions of long-term policy stability within Canada.
Infrastructure buildout and financing
Vietnam is accelerating highways, ports, rail, airports and industrial infrastructure to support double-digit growth ambitions for 2026-2030. However, execution depends on public-investment efficiency, private conglomerate participation, land clearance, materials availability and transparent bidding, affecting project timelines and investor confidence.
War Damage to Energy Infrastructure
Ukrainian drone strikes continue to hit refineries, terminals, and export infrastructure, cutting output and refined-product shipments even when revenues hold up. This raises operational volatility for commodity buyers, shipping operators, and industrial consumers relying on Russian-origin or Russia-linked energy flows.
Judicial Reform and Legal Certainty
Institutional uncertainty remains a material investor concern as the government revisits parts of judicial reform after controversy over judge elections and weak turnout. Businesses face persistent questions over contract enforcement, dispute resolution, and the broader reliability of Mexico’s legal environment.
Sanctions Circumvention Through Third Countries
Russia continues rerouting trade through intermediaries such as Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, the UAE, and Asian refiners processing Russian crude. This complicates origin tracing and supplier vetting, raising legal, reputational, and customs risks for companies exposed to re-exported goods or refined products.
Offshore Wind Industrial Expansion
Taiwan’s offshore wind sector has reached about 4.4GW of installed capacity and generated 10.28 billion kWh in 2025, making it a major industrial and resilience theme. Growth supports green-power procurement and local manufacturing, but grid bottlenecks, financing and marine-engineering gaps remain material.
Weak Growth And Labor Strain
Macroeconomic conditions remain fragile, with unemployment rising to 32.7% in the first quarter, or about 8.1 million people. Weak growth, poverty and cost pressures may curb consumer demand, intensify labor tensions and increase political pressure for more interventionist economic measures.
Logistics Hub Infrastructure Push
Thailand is expanding its logistics strategy through rail upgrades, cross-border links to Malaysia and China via Laos, and upgrades at Laem Chabang port, which handled a record 1.936 million TEUs in 2025. Better connectivity supports exporters, though project execution remains critical.
Migration Reforms Target Skill Gaps
The government will keep permanent migration at 185,000 places, with more than 70% for skilled entrants, while spending A$85.2 million on faster trade-skills recognition. Businesses should benefit from quicker labor access, though lower net migration may still tighten workforce availability.
Shadow Trade and Compliance Complexity
Iran continues using floating storage, ship-to-ship transfers, older tankers, and alternative logistics to keep some exports moving. For international firms, these practices heighten due-diligence burdens across shipping, commodity trading, banking, and insurance, with greater exposure to hidden beneficial ownership and sanctions-evasion networks.
Maritime and Energy Route Vulnerabilities
Conflict-linked disruption around Hormuz and concerns over Malacca and South China Sea chokepoints underscore China’s trade exposure. Around 80% of China’s energy imports transit Malacca, making shipping, insurance, and energy-intensive operations vulnerable to geopolitical shocks.
Digital Infrastructure and AI Expansion
Amazon plans to invest more than €15 billion in France over three years, including logistics, data storage and AI capacity, while Ile-de-France added 66 MW of data-center capacity in 2025. Strong demand supports digital investment, though grid connection and land shortages constrain scaling.
IMF-Driven Fiscal Tightening
IMF-backed financing of about $1.2-1.3 billion has stabilized reserves above $17 billion, but stricter budget targets, broader taxation and fiscal consolidation raise compliance costs, suppress domestic demand, and shape investment timing, import planning, and sovereign risk assessments.
Coalition crisis and election risk
Netanyahu’s coalition is under acute strain as ultra-Orthodox parties push to dissolve the Knesset over conscription exemptions. The prospect of early elections increases policy uncertainty around taxation, regulation, budgets and public spending, delaying business decisions and complicating medium-term market-entry or investment planning.
Defence Industrial Expansion in Western Australia
Western Australia is accelerating defence manufacturing, including a proposed missile hub and broader AUKUS-linked supplier development. This creates opportunities in advanced manufacturing, engineering and maritime services, while redirecting capital and workforce demand toward defence-oriented industrial ecosystems.
B50 Biodiesel Reshapes Palm Trade
Indonesia plans to raise its palm biodiesel mandate to B50 from July 1, increasing domestic CPO absorption by roughly 16 million tons annually. That could tighten export availability, raise edible-oil prices, and alter procurement strategies for food, chemicals, and biofuel-linked businesses.
Inflation and lira instability
Turkey’s inflation hit 32.4% in April while the central bank effectively tightened funding to 40% and spent reserves defending the lira. Currency volatility, pricing uncertainty and imported-cost pressures are complicating contracts, margins, hedging and capital allocation decisions.
Semiconductor and Strategic Subsidies
Japan is intensifying support for semiconductor and high-tech supply chains through subsidies, export controls and economic-security policy. For international firms, this strengthens Japan’s appeal for advanced manufacturing investment, but adds compliance complexity, tighter technology controls and stronger expectations for localized, resilient production footprints.