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:
Labor shortages and migration friction
Germany still faces structural labor shortages, yet migration and repatriation debates risk discouraging skilled foreign workers. Tighter rhetoric and administrative frictions could worsen shortages in healthcare, technical trades, and industry, increasing hiring costs and constraining operational scaling.
Foreign Investment Market Deepens
FDI momentum remains strong, with inflows rising to $35.5 billion in 2025 and total FDI stock reaching SR3.32 trillion. More than 700 multinational regional headquarters now operate in the Kingdom, reinforcing Saudi Arabia’s role as a regional investment and corporate hub.
Energy Cost Competitiveness Squeeze
High power costs remain a major constraint on UK manufacturing, with industrial electricity prices previously around 25.85p/kWh versus roughly 18p in France and Germany and 6.5p in the US. Expanded relief for 10,000 firms helps, but competitiveness pressure persists.
Trade Logistics and Port Reconfiguration
Regional disruption is reshaping maritime flows through Karachi, where authorities report 99% of transshipment issues resolved and channel-deepening upgrades underway. Improving port performance could support trade resilience, but shipping volatility and customs costs still affect turnaround times and supply chains.
Semiconductor Concentration Remains Critical
Taiwan still produces more than 90% of the world’s most advanced semiconductors, keeping global electronics, AI, and automotive supply chains highly exposed. Any disruption would reverberate quickly through pricing, lead times, procurement strategies, and capital allocation decisions worldwide.
Fuel And Industrial Shortages
Energy disruption is constraining domestic industry, with reported gasoline deficits reaching 77 million liters daily under war conditions and refinery stress worsening shortages. Businesses face heightened risk of electricity curbs, fuel scarcity, factory stoppages, transport disruption, and delayed local procurement.
Expanded Sanctions and Secondary Risk
The U.S. is intensifying sanctions enforcement on Iranian oil networks and signaling broader secondary sanctions on foreign banks, shipping, and traders. Companies with exposure to China, the Gulf, or energy logistics face greater counterparty screening needs and payment disruption risks.
EV Transition and Industrial Policy
Thailand is pairing near-term energy relief with longer-term industrial policy support for EVs, hybrids, semiconductors, and clean energy. Incentives, trade-in proposals, and green financing may attract advanced manufacturing, though competition from lower-cost regional peers remains intense.
Semiconductor Export Controls Expansion
Congress is advancing tighter semiconductor equipment controls aimed at Chinese fabs, including possible new restrictions on ASML DUV tools and servicing licenses. This could further fragment technology supply chains, constrain China-linked sales, and raise compliance burdens for chip, equipment, and electronics firms.
Domestic Deleveraging Demand Drag
Tighter household debt controls and mortgage renewal restrictions are part of a broader deleveraging push, with authorities targeting household loan growth of 1.5% or less. While improving financial stability, weaker property activity and consumer demand could soften domestic sales, logistics demand, and business sentiment.
Weak Growth and Policy Constraints
Thailand’s macro backdrop remains fragile, with 2026 GDP growth forecast around 1.2% to 1.6%, public debt near 66% of GDP, and limited fiscal room. Slower growth, softer external demand, and cautious capital markets may delay expansion decisions and increase financing and demand-side uncertainty.
Clean Tech Trade Tensions
China’s dominant position in solar and EV-related manufacturing is colliding with overseas industrial policy and trade defenses. Possible curbs on advanced solar equipment exports and continuing overcapacity concerns heighten tariff, anti-subsidy and localization risks for global clean-tech investors and buyers.
Sanctions Compliance and Russia Exposure
UK sanctions enforcement remains commercially relevant as Russian oil continues moving through shadow-fleet networks, flag changes, and Dubai intermediaries. Firms in shipping, energy trading, insurance, and commodities face heightened due-diligence, origin-tracing, and enforcement risks tied to evolving UK-EU sanctions regimes.
Energy Diversification Reshapes Trade
Seoul is accelerating crude and LNG diversification toward the United States, Kazakhstan and other suppliers to reduce Middle East dependence. This may improve resilience over time, but longer shipping routes, higher logistics costs, and policy-linked buying commitments will reshape sourcing strategies and bilateral trade flows.
Critical Minerals Need Corridors
Canada aims to grow from 2% of global critical minerals supply to as much as 14% by 2040, but logistics remain decisive. Flat exploration spending near $4.2 billion since 2023 signals investors still want clearer power, rail, processing, and port infrastructure.
Industrial Policy Turns More Active
Ottawa is moving toward a more interventionist industrial strategy centered on value-added production, local-content procurement, strategic sectors, and supply-chain resilience. This may create incentives in clean technology, aerospace, defense, and processing, but also introduces policy complexity and procurement-related trade frictions.
Maritime Exports Remain Resilient
Despite heavy attacks, Ukraine’s Black Sea corridor remains the backbone of export earnings. Ports handled over 21 million tonnes in Q1, achieving 98% of target, including 11.6 million tonnes of grain, 1.2 million tonnes of metals, and container throughput up 43% year on year.
Fiscal Reform and Infrastructure Push
Berlin is pairing weak growth with a large reform agenda, including a €500 billion infrastructure fund, debt-brake changes and prospective tax relief. If implemented efficiently, this could support construction, defense, transport and digital sectors, though execution risks remain significant.
US Trade Talks Recalibration
India-US trade negotiations remain commercially important but less predictable after Washington’s tariff reset and Section 301 probes. India seeks preferential access, while bilateral goods trade dynamics shifted as exports to the US reached $87.3 billion and imports rose to $52.9 billion.
War-Risk Logistics Resilience
Ukraine’s Black Sea corridor remains operational despite attacks every five days, with ports handling over 21 million tonnes in Q1 and container volumes up 43% year on year. Trade remains feasible, but shipping, insurance, and contingency planning stay mission-critical.
Defense And Minerals Attract Capital
Wartime demand is accelerating investment into defense technology, critical minerals, and strategic manufacturing. New EU guarantees and grants aim to mobilize about €400 million for drones, space, and communications technologies, while U.S. and European partnerships are expanding into lithium and other mineral projects.
IMF Reforms Stabilize Economy
IMF-backed reforms, exchange-rate flexibility, and tighter policies have improved resilience, with reserves at $52.8 billion and inflation down from 38% to 11.9% before renewed shocks. Investors benefit from stronger buffers, though implementation discipline remains critical for confidence.
Energy Shock and Cost Pressure
Germany cut its 2026 growth forecast to 0.5% as the Iran war lifted oil, gas and power costs, raising inflation toward 2.7-2.8%. Higher energy prices are squeezing manufacturers, transport operators and importers, worsening margins, planning uncertainty and competitiveness.
Tax Reform Implementation Risks
Brazil began transitioning to its new dual VAT in 2026, replacing five indirect taxes through 2033. Pending IBS/CBS regulation, estimated combined rates near 26.5%, and system adaptation requirements create significant compliance, pricing, contracting, and ERP risks for multinationals.
Fiscal Credibility and Debt
Brazil’s 2027 budget targets a R$73.2 billion primary surplus, but debt is still projected to peak near 87.8% of GDP in 2029. Fiscal triggers limiting spending and tax incentives shape sovereign risk, financing costs, exchange rates, and long-term investment decisions.
Logistics Reform Targets Cost
Indonesia is pushing rail-ferry integration and preparing a National Logistics Strengthening regulation to reduce logistics costs from 14.2% to 12.5% by 2029. Transport still accounts for 62% of logistics costs, while road dependence keeps distribution expensive and vulnerable to seasonal restrictions.
Energy Shortages Constrain Industry
Iran’s domestic energy system is structurally fragile despite vast reserves, with gas shortages, power cuts, and attacks on South Pars and Asaluyeh threatening electricity and feedstock supply. Energy-intensive manufacturers face rising interruption risk, lower utilization, and greater uncertainty over export-oriented petrochemical output.
B50 Mandate Alters Palm Trade
Indonesia will launch B50 biodiesel on 1 July, aiming to cut fossil fuel use by 4 million kiloliters and save Rp48 trillion. However, stronger domestic palm demand could divert crude palm oil from exports, affect levy financing, and tighten feedstock availability.
Alliance Frictions Reshape Strategy
US-South Korea tensions over tariffs, burden-sharing, and Middle East cooperation are pushing the relationship toward a more transactional footing. Companies should expect policy unpredictability around market access, troop-cost politics, industrial commitments, and cross-border investment negotiations affecting long-term planning.
US Metal Tariffs Escalate
New U.S. rules now apply 25% tariffs to the full value of many steel, aluminum, and copper-based products, sharply increasing costs for Canadian manufacturers. Companies report cancelled orders, suspended forecasts, and potential production shifts, undermining cross-border supply chains and investment decisions.
Electronics Manufacturing Scale-Up
India’s electronics ecosystem is deepening through Apple and Tata-led expansion, including ₹1,500 crore fresh Tata Electronics funding and rising component exports to China. This strengthens India’s role in global electronics supply chains and supports diversification away from China for multinational manufacturers.
IMF Dependence and External Financing
Pakistan’s macro stability remains anchored to IMF disbursements, with about $1.2 billion pending and possible programme expansion of $2-2.5 billion. Reserve gaps, budget negotiations, and tax reforms directly shape currency stability, sovereign risk, and investor confidence.
Digital Infrastructure Investment Push
Indonesia is accelerating data-center and AI investment, backed by data-localization pressure, lower land and power costs, and major commitments from Microsoft, DAMAC and Indosat-NVIDIA. This strengthens the country’s digital-operating environment while creating opportunities in infrastructure, cloud and services.
Energy Export Infrastructure Acceleration
Canada is fast-tracking LNG and pipeline projects as firms seek to diversify beyond the U.S. amid trade conflict and Middle East energy disruption. LNG Canada expansion, Ksi Lisims talks, and a proposed West Coast crude line could reshape export routes and upstream investment.
FDI Competitiveness and Repatriation
Despite strong gross inflows, net FDI stayed negative for a fifth straight month in January 2026 at minus $1.39 billion, as repatriation and disinvestment surged to $4.92 billion. Competition from Vietnam, Mexico, and Poland sharpens pressure to improve tax certainty and execution.
Trade Diversification Becomes Imperative
Canada is accelerating efforts to reduce overdependence on the U.S. market, which still absorbed roughly 72% of goods exports in 2025. This is pushing firms to diversify toward Europe and Asia-Pacific, reshaping logistics, partner selection, investment priorities, and market-entry strategies.