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:
Shadow Trade And China Channels
Iran is relying more heavily on opaque trade networks, yuan-linked settlement, barter-style oil-for-infrastructure deals, and indirect exports to China. These channels preserve some external commerce but increase counterparty opacity, sanctions screening difficulty, reputational risk, and legal uncertainty for international firms touching adjacent supply chains.
Defence Industrial Expansion
India is accelerating defence manufacturing with expanded procurement powers exceeding Rs 1.25 lakh crore annually, rising private-sector participation and new export deals. This supports domestic industrial deepening, supplier opportunities, and technology partnerships, while reducing exposure to fragile foreign defence and dual-use supply chains.
Resilient Growth Amid Regional Conflict
Despite regional war spillovers, Saudi Arabia is still expected to grow about 3.1% in 2026, outperforming most Gulf peers. Low public debt, ample reserves, inflation below 2%, and strong banking liquidity support business continuity, though medium-term investment confidence remains vulnerable.
Shadow fleet maritime risk
Europe is intensifying interceptions and insurance scrutiny of Russia-linked tankers, including vessels using irregular flags. With much Russian oil moving via aging shadow-fleet ships, shipping delays, environmental liabilities, port access restrictions and maritime compliance risks are rising across regional supply chains.
Arctic LNG sanctions leakage
Despite EU restrictions, more than 8.3 million tonnes of Yamal LNG reached EU ports in January-May, up 17.9% year on year. This highlights sanctions loopholes, but also signals abrupt future enforcement risk for utilities, shippers, financiers and LNG-linked infrastructure projects.
Investor Confidence in Policy Direction
Markets are reacting to perceptions of heavier state intervention, abrupt rule changes, and weaker policy credibility under Prabowo. Indonesia’s stock market has fallen sharply, ratings outlooks have turned negative, and firms are reassessing country exposure, financing timing, and expansion risk.
Trade Realignment Toward Europe
The EU pledged €11.5 billion for South African clean energy, transport, and pharmaceuticals under Global Gateway while negotiating improved trade terms and a critical minerals framework. This could diversify capital inflows and export partnerships, partially offsetting uncertainty in US relations.
Trade Corridor Importance Increases
With Hormuz disruptions and wider Middle East conflict risks, Turkey’s diversified supply structure and corridor assets gained strategic value. First-quarter gas imports reached 19.2 bcm and oil-product imports 3.32 million tons, underscoring Turkey’s importance for regional logistics, re-export, and procurement strategies.
Steel and Aluminum Cost Pressure
Mexico’s manufacturers continue to face severe metals-related trade pressure as US tariffs remain elevated, including rates reported at up to 50% on steel and aluminum. The burden increases input costs, threatens margins in export manufacturing, and may accelerate relocation or supplier restructuring decisions.
Human capital and tech pressure
Israel’s hi-tech sector, which accounts for 17% of GDP and 57% of exports, faces mounting strain from reserve duty, undercompensated student-reservists, and outward migration. Talent shortages and brain-drain concerns could weigh on innovation, startup formation, and foreign investment sentiment.
Oil Export Shadow Networks
Iran continues moving crude through shadow-fleet tankers, ship-to-ship transfers and opaque ownership structures, mainly toward China. Estimates indicate roughly $31 billion in annual oil revenue from China and about 1.4 million barrels per day before the latest wartime escalation.
Agribusiness Credit Stress Builds
Brazilian agriculture faces rising debt-servicing pressure as high rates, weaker margins and tighter credit follow years of leverage expansion. Proposed rural debt renegotiation may bring temporary relief, but it also adds fiscal risk and could further distort credit allocation across the economy.
Critical Minerals Alliance Deepens
Australia and the United States have signed a critical minerals agreement including US$1 billion from each side over six months and minimum-price support. The arrangement could accelerate mining and processing investment, reduce China dependence, and reshape battery and defence supply chains.
Higher Rates and Fiscal Stabilisation
The Reserve Bank lifted rates 25 basis points to 7%, while Treasury reported a primary surplus of 1.1% of GDP and stabilising debt. Macro credibility supports investor sentiment, but tighter financing conditions raise borrowing costs and may slow private investment and consumer activity.
Industrial energy cost strain
High electricity costs and green levies continue to undermine UK competitiveness in energy-intensive industries such as aluminium, chemicals, and ceramics. This constrains domestic output, threatens supply resilience, and may redirect investment toward lower-cost jurisdictions unless policy relief broadens.
Digital Regulation and Investment Friction
Canada’s digital and media regulation is becoming a trade irritant. CRTC rules requiring major streamers to contribute 15% of Canadian revenues drew U.S. criticism, while Ottawa is advancing AI spending and digital sovereignty measures that could affect foreign tech operators, compliance costs and investment perceptions.
Critical Minerals Industrial Push
Turkey is positioning itself in boron, rare earths, and lithium processing, citing 73% of global boron reserves and new lithium carbonate capacity. This could support battery, defense, and advanced manufacturing supply chains, while creating opportunities around mining, processing, and industrial partnerships.
Logistics Concessions Drive Efficiency
Brazil is advancing major transport concessions, including a proposed 30-year renewal of the Ferrovia Centro-Atlântica with R$27.6 billion in investment. Upgrades to rail, urban crossings and corridor access could improve commodity flows, but approvals and re-tendering still carry execution and regulatory risk.
Customs Enforcement Burden Increases
A new enforcement push targets transshipment, undervaluation, forced-labor imports, and importer-of-record practices, with tighter bond, disclosure, and beneficial-ownership requirements. Companies shipping into the United States face higher audit risk, stricter documentation demands, and potential market-access disruption for compliance failures.
Housing Shortages Reshape Policy
Housing undersupply remains a major operating constraint, with the National Housing Supply and Affordability Council projecting 900,000 homes of demand versus 862,000 net new dwellings by 2029, influencing labour mobility, migration politics, construction costs, and location strategies.
Logistics Corridors Gain Momentum
Brazil’s Supreme Court cleared a key legal hurdle for the Ferrograo railway linking Mato Grosso to northern export hubs. The project could cut grain logistics costs and emissions, but environmental licensing, Indigenous reviews and concession structuring still leave execution timelines uncertain.
Suez Revenue Shock Persists
Red Sea and Hormuz disruptions have cut Suez Canal revenue by nearly $10 billion, weakening foreign-exchange inflows and fiscal buffers. Although port volumes rose strongly, canal losses still raise shipping uncertainty, insurance costs, and macro risk for importers and exporters.
Regional conflict and maritime disruption
Conflict linked to Iran and threats to Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb are disrupting shipping, raising insurance and freight costs, and increasing delivery risk. Saudi firms benefit from bypass routes, but broader trade, aviation, and investor sentiment remain vulnerable.
Mandatory Export Proceeds Retention
New rules require non-oil resource exporters to retain 100% of foreign-exchange earnings domestically for at least 12 months, while oil and gas exporters must retain 30% for three months. The measure affects liquidity, treasury operations, banking relationships and rupiah exposure.
Energy Export Diversification Push
Ottawa is accelerating LNG, oil, electricity and pipeline expansion to diversify beyond the U.S. Prime Minister Carney targets doubling non-U.S. exports this decade, while South Korea plans to raise Canadian crude imports from 4.88 million barrels in 2025 to as much as 16 million in 2026.
Nickel Nationalism and Policy Uncertainty
Indonesia’s tighter nickel royalties, lower mining quotas, foreign-exchange retention rules, and stronger state oversight are unsettling investors after more than US$65 billion in Chinese downstream investment. Expansion delays, higher required returns, and supply-chain volatility could affect EV batteries, stainless steel, and smelting projects.
Regional Conflict Spillover Risk
Egypt’s relative domestic stability supports investment, but exposure to Gaza, Sudan, Red Sea insecurity and broader US-Israel-Iran tensions remains high. Conflict spillovers can hit food and energy prices, tourism demand, border management and investor sentiment with little warning.
Large US Purchase Commitments
Trade negotiations include India’s indication it could purchase around $500 billion of US goods over five years, including energy, aircraft, technology products and coking coal. If implemented, this would redirect trade flows, create procurement opportunities and affect supplier positioning across industrial sectors.
Governance and Judicial Certainty Concerns
Investors continue to flag corruption, procurement irregularities, and judicial reform uncertainty as constraints on capital deployment. Recent sanctions on 32 suppliers show enforcement activity, but businesses still see weak institutional predictability, complicating infrastructure investment, dispute resolution, and confidence in long-term operating conditions.
Power Sector Tariff Uncertainty
Energy reform remains central to Pakistan’s business climate, with subsidy retargeting, tariff revisions and unresolved negotiations with Chinese IPPs. Although authorities cite Rs3.5 trillion in savings, circular debt, fixed charges and grid inefficiencies still threaten industrial competitiveness and margins.
War Damage And Ceasefire Fragility
The ceasefire with the United States and Israel remains unstable, with mediation interruptions, linked Hezbollah tensions, and fresh strikes keeping escalation risk elevated. Businesses face persistent uncertainty around asset damage, operational continuity, reconstruction timelines, and abrupt policy or security reversals.
Foreign Worker Policy Shift
To offset labor shortages, companies are increasingly recruiting from India, Egypt, and Bangladesh, but only 6,272 labor migrants reportedly remain employed—just 0.14% of estimated need. Simplifying permits and residence rules will materially affect project delivery capacity and operating scalability.
Security Spillover Into Trade
Trade negotiations are increasingly tied to security, cartel violence, fentanyl enforcement, corruption allegations, and migration. This broadening agenda raises sovereign and operational risk for investors, especially in logistics-intensive sectors, while increasing uncertainty around border flows, compliance, and bilateral decision-making.
External Sector Fragility
Pakistan’s external position improved through March, supported by remittances rising 8.2% and a $72 million current-account surplus, but April swung to a $324 million deficit after regional conflict. Businesses remain exposed to oil-price spikes, freight volatility, and foreign-exchange pressure.
Administrative Reform And Special Zones
Authorities are pushing development-oriented governance, streamlined procedures, and experimental institutional models in high-tech parks, free-trade zones, and financial centers. For international firms, implementation quality will shape approval timelines, land access, compliance burdens, and the attractiveness of expansion projects.
ASEAN Partnerships Bolster Resilience
Vietnam is deepening economic links with Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines around supply chains, food security, advanced manufacturing and logistics. These agreements diversify commercial options, support regional sourcing, and reduce single-market dependence for trade, investment, and operating continuity.