Mission Grey Daily Brief - February 07, 2025
Summary of the Global Situation for Businesses and Investors
The global situation remains volatile, with no clear international order and a normalization of conflict. The risk of escalating global conflict is high, particularly in Ukraine, the Middle East, and Taiwan. Structural issues such as climate change, artificial intelligence, and nuclear weapons also pose significant challenges. In the absence of diplomacy and great power relations, the ability to stop conflict and address defining issues is limited.
The war in Ukraine continues to be a geopolitical and economic issue, with critical raw materials at stake. Sanctions on Iran's oil exports to China and Iran's ability to sustain oil exports are tied to negotiations with the Trump administration. Northern Ireland and Mexico are impacted by Trump's trade war with the EU, with border cities fearing economic repercussions. The UK may benefit from the trade war as a hub for companies seeking alternatives to traditional trade routes.
Ukraine-Russia War
The war in Ukraine continues to be a geopolitical and economic issue, with critical raw materials at stake. Ukraine's immense reserves of lithium, titanium, graphite, and rare earth metals are essential for modern industry, military technology, clean energy, and advanced manufacturing. American leaders tend to treat war as a military problem, neglecting the economic and strategic conditions necessary to win the peace. Ukraine's proximity to European industrial centers and access to Black Sea trading routes provide it with geopolitical advantages over potential export competitors in Sub-Saharan Africa and East Asia. Under the right conditions, Ukraine could become a major player in critical supply chains, strengthening the West's future as a manufacturing and technological powerhouse.
Trump's Trade War with the EU
Northern Ireland and Mexico are impacted by Trump's trade war with the EU, with border cities fearing economic repercussions. Northern Ireland is assessing its exposure to the trade war, as Mexican border cities fear US tariffs could cripple their economy and spark a recession. Manufacturing hubs along the northern Mexican border are in limbo, with business leaders and investors tightening their purse strings due to uncertainty. The interdependence between the US and Mexico leaves many struggling to imagine a future without it.
Iran's Oil Exports and Sanctions
Sanctions on Iran's oil exports to China and Iran's ability to sustain oil exports are tied to negotiations with the Trump administration. The Trump administration has unveiled sanctions on Iran's oil exports to China, aiming to pressure Iran over its nuclear program and regional influence. Iran's ability to sustain oil exports will depend on whether it strikes a deal with Trump, following his order to return to "maximum pressure" sanctions. The sanctions could significantly impact Iran's economy and its ability to fund its military and regional activities.
UK's Potential Advantage in Trump's Trade War
The UK could be a big winner in Trump's trade war, as tariffs imposed by the US on other major economies redirect investments and global trade. The UK's trade relations with the US are more balanced, and it may avoid tariffs, becoming an attractive center for investments and trade. Economic experts highlight that while some sectors may feel the effects of tariffs, the British economy, largely based on financial and consulting services, is shielded from restrictive measures. The British pound could become a safe-haven currency for investors, strengthening the UK's position as an attractive alternative to European markets affected by American protectionism.
Further Reading:
2024 was rough year for geopolitics. Here’s what U.S. is facing. - Harvard Gazette
Mexico border cities fear U.S. tariffs could cripple economy, spark recesssion - PBS NewsHour
Northern Ireland Sizes Up Exposure to Trump Trade War With EU - Bloomberg
Total Sees Funding for $20B Mozambique LNG in 'Weeks' - Energy Intelligence
Trump Needs a Plan on Ukraine’s Buried Treasure - War On The Rocks
Trump administration unveils sanctions on Iran oil exports to China - Al-Monitor
Trump's trade war could have a clear winner: the United Kingdom - spotmedia.ro
Themes around the World:
Tourism And Services Vulnerability
Regional conflict is causing booking delays and cancellations in a sector that brought in $65 billion from 64 million visitors last year. Any tourism slowdown would weaken foreign-exchange earnings, pressure the current account and reduce demand across hospitality, retail, transport and real estate.
Currency Stability Versus Hot Money
Recent inflows of $1.78 billion into government debt helped stabilize the pound, but much support still appears short term. Companies face ongoing exchange-rate risk, profit repatriation uncertainty, and exposure to sudden portfolio reversals if regional or global sentiment deteriorates.
Red Sea Logistics Reorientation
Saudi Arabia is accelerating Red Sea export and cargo corridors via Yanbu, Jeddah, and Neom to bypass Hormuz. The East-West pipeline can move 7 million bpd, while new multimodal Europe-Gulf routes are reshaping supply-chain routing and port investment priorities.
Autos and Industrial Base Pressure
Tariffs and CUSMA tensions are intensifying pressure on Canada’s auto and broader manufacturing base, including steel, lumber, and machinery. Businesses face margin compression, relocation risk, and weakened long-term confidence as North American production rules and industrial policy become more politicized.
Saudization Tightens Labor Rules
New localization rules require 60% Saudization across at least 20 marketing and sales roles and 100% Saudi staffing in 69 additional jobs. International employers face higher workforce-planning, compliance, wage, training, and operating-cost considerations across private-sector operations.
Semiconductor Sovereignty Investment Surge
Tokyo approved an additional ¥631.5 billion for Rapidus, with total support expected to reach about ¥2.6 trillion by March 2027. The push to localize advanced 2-nanometre chip production strengthens supply resilience, but execution, cost and customer risks remain material.
Semiconductor Export Concentration Risk
Record exports are being driven overwhelmingly by chips, with March shipments up 48.3% to $86.13 billion and semiconductors surging 151.4% to $32.83 billion. This supports trade and investment, but heightens Korea’s exposure to AI-cycle swings, pricing reversals, and sector-specific disruptions.
Sanctions Volatility Reshapes War Economics
Shifting U.S. and EU sanctions policy on Russian oil affects Ukraine indirectly by influencing Moscow’s revenues, energy prices, and the wider risk environment. Kyiv says over 110 shadow-fleet tankers carry about 12 million tonnes worth $10 billion, underscoring geopolitical exposure for traders.
Energy Supply Dependence and Fracking
Mexico imports about 75% of its natural gas consumption from the United States, exposing industry and power generation to external supply risk. The government is reconsidering fracking to improve energy security, but environmental, cost and execution uncertainties could delay reliable capacity additions.
Inflation-energy interest rate tension
Annual inflation eased to 1.9% in March, within the 1-3% target, yet the Bank of Israel kept rates at 4% because regional conflict is lifting energy costs. Borrowing conditions remain relatively tight for investment, real estate and expansion decisions.
Tax Digitization Tightens Enforcement
India is intensifying GST and income-tax enforcement through e-invoicing expansion, AI-led reconciliation, and cross-platform data matching. Businesses face greater scrutiny of sales reporting, input credits, and cash activity, increasing the importance of robust internal controls, digital systems, and proactive compliance management.
Sectoral Protectionism Expands Rapidly
The United States is increasingly using national-security tools and industrial policy to protect strategic sectors, including metals, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and clean technology. This favors localized production and subsidy-seeking investment, but raises input costs and complicates procurement for internationally exposed manufacturers.
Lira Volatility And Reserves
Authorities have spent or swapped over $50 billion to support the lira, while net reserves excluding swaps fell sharply before partial recovery. Persistent currency fragility raises hedging costs, import pricing risk, balance-sheet stress and repatriation concerns for multinationals and investors.
Defense Buildup Reshapes Industry
France plans an extra €36 billion in defence spending by 2030, lifting military outlays to 2.5% of GDP and annual spending to €76.3 billion. This supports aerospace, electronics, cybersecurity, and advanced manufacturing, but competes with wider fiscal priorities.
Higher Rates and Funding Costs
Markets are pricing possible Bank of England tightening as inflation risks rebound, even as growth weakens. Rising mortgage, corporate borrowing and gilt yields increase financing costs, reduce consumer spending power, and complicate capital allocation, refinancing and investment timing decisions.
Symbolic OPEC+ output policy
OPEC+ approved a symbolic May quota rise of 206,000 barrels per day, but actual export gains remain limited by maritime disruption. For international firms, this means continued oil price volatility, uncertain feedstock costs, and unstable planning assumptions for energy-intensive operations.
Europe Faces Refined Products Loophole
EU buyers still received 14 fuel cargoes in March from refineries in Turkey, India and Georgia using Russian crude feedstock. This refining loophole keeps Russian molecules in European supply chains, creating regulatory uncertainty for importers, commodity traders and downstream manufacturers.
Agricultural Exports Face Port Congestion
Agriculture remains Ukraine’s main export engine, but grain terminal congestion is creating truck queues, slower unloading, and contract-delay risks. In January-February, farm exports reached 9.95 million tonnes worth $4 billion, while bottlenecks pressure prices and complicate shipment planning for buyers.
Trade Competitiveness and Exports
A controlled but persistent lira depreciation supports export competitiveness in manufacturing, especially automotive and industrial goods, but imported input dependence offsets benefits. Businesses should expect continued margin volatility as FX policy, energy prices and external demand remain unstable.
High-Tech Investment Policy Support
The Knesset’s 2026 budget introduced new R&D tax credits to retain technology investment amid OECD Pillar Two reforms. Enhanced incentives for peripheral regions and large firms may support multinational expansion, hiring, and IP activity, partly offsetting geopolitical and financing concerns.
Fiscal slippage and rates
Brazil’s fiscal outlook is deteriorating, with the 2026 primary deficit projection raised from R$23 billion to about R$60 billion, while automatic spending pressures persist. This sustains high borrowing costs, currency volatility, and tighter financing conditions for trade, investment, and expansion plans.
Tighter Security, Data Controls
Political control, anti-corruption enforcement, and national-security priorities continue to tighten the operating environment for private and foreign firms. Greater scrutiny over data, capital movement, and compliance increases regulatory uncertainty, elevating legal, reputational, and operational risks for cross-border businesses in China.
Semiconductor and Technology Controls Tighten
US policymakers are moving to intensify semiconductor export controls, including proposed restrictions on DUV lithography tools, parts, and servicing for Chinese fabs. This would deepen technology bifurcation, pressure allied suppliers, and complicate electronics investment, customer access, and long-term innovation planning.
Inflation, Rates, Currency Pressure
Urban inflation rose to 15.2% in March, the highest since May, while the pound weakened to about 53.3 per dollar and policy rates remain at 19%. Import costs, pricing strategies, wage pressure, and financing conditions therefore remain challenging for operators.
Macroeconomic Volatility and FX Pressure
Egypt faces renewed inflation and currency stress as urban inflation rose to 15.2% in March, the pound weakened near EGP 53-54 per dollar, and rates remain at 19%. Higher import costs, financing costs, and pricing uncertainty complicate investment planning and trade execution.
Severe Macroeconomic Instability
Inflation is running near 50% officially, with some warnings of far higher wartime acceleration, while the rial has sharply depreciated. This undermines pricing, wage planning, procurement and demand forecasting, and raises counterparty, payroll and working-capital risks for any business exposure.
Semiconductor Manufacturing Scale-Up
India approved Tata’s ₹91,000 crore chip fabrication SEZ in Dholera, expected to create about 21,000 jobs, alongside Micron and other projects. The build-out strengthens electronics supply-chain localization, lowers import dependence, and improves India’s attractiveness for advanced manufacturing investment.
FDI Surge Reshapes Manufacturing
Registered FDI rose 42.9% year on year to $15.2 billion in Q1, with disbursed FDI reaching a five-year high of $5.41 billion. Manufacturing captured over 70% of total capital, reinforcing Vietnam’s role in electronics, industrial supply chains, and regional production diversification.
Expanding Sector-Specific Import Barriers
Washington is replacing invalidated broad tariffs with targeted barriers on pharmaceuticals, steel, aluminum, and copper. New rules include up to 100% duties on some branded drugs and 25-50% metal tariffs, raising landed costs for manufacturers, healthcare suppliers, and industrial importers.
CUSMA Review and Tariff Uncertainty
Canada faces elevated trade and investment uncertainty as the July 1 CUSMA review is expected to run long, with U.S. demands on dairy, procurement, digital rules and metals. Annual reviews or tougher rules of origin could delay capital deployment.
Port Vila Weather Disruptions
Recent cruise cancellations in Port Vila, attributed largely to adverse weather, underscore operational volatility for itineraries, shore excursions, port services, and local suppliers. Repeated disruptions can reduce passenger spend, complicate scheduling, and increase insurance, contingency, and logistics costs.
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.
FDI Surge into High-Tech
Vietnam’s early-2026 investment boom is reshaping regional supply chains: registered FDI rose 42.9% year on year to US$15.2 billion and disbursed FDI reached US$5.41 billion, with over 70% directed to manufacturing, semiconductors, AI, digital infrastructure, and greener production.
Local Fiscal Stimulus Dependence
China’s Q1 2026 local bond issuance reached 3.1059 trillion yuan, up 9.3% year on year, with over 1 trillion yuan in new special bonds. Growth remains reliant on debt-backed infrastructure and industrial projects, supporting suppliers short term but worsening balance-sheet vulnerabilities.
Semiconductor Export Control Escalation
Washington is tightening technology restrictions on China through the proposed MATCH Act, targeting DUV lithography, servicing, and allied suppliers. The measures could reshape semiconductor capital equipment flows, raise compliance burdens, and reinforce geographic fragmentation across advanced electronics supply chains.
Reform Momentum Boosts Investment
The government is using structural reform and the GNU’s relative stability to rebuild investor confidence, targeting R2 trillion in pledges for 2026-2030. Ratings improvement, FATF grey-list exit and regulatory streamlining support FDI, though implementation credibility still matters.