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:
Suez Canal Revenue Weakness
Red Sea insecurity continues to suppress canal earnings despite partial recovery. Quarterly Suez revenues reached $1.15 billion, still far below the $2.4 billion recorded before shipping disruptions, affecting foreign-exchange inflows, maritime routing economics, and Egypt’s trade-linked fiscal position.
China Exposure Faces Scrutiny
Canada’s trade posture toward China is becoming more sensitive as U.S. officials criticize perceived openness to Chinese products and transshipment risks. Businesses exposed to China-linked sourcing, electric vehicles, or strategic minerals should expect greater geopolitical scrutiny, compliance burdens, and partnership reassessment.
Data and Cybersecurity Compliance Clash
China’s data, state-secrets, and supply-chain security rules increasingly conflict with overseas due-diligence, audit, and cybersecurity requirements. Foreign companies face rising risks of investigation, penalties, and compliance contradictions, particularly in telecoms, critical infrastructure, technology, and sectors handling sensitive operational or customer data.
Fiscal Extraction from Business
Moscow is considering new windfall levies on commodity producers and banks after a similar 2023 tax raised 318.8 billion rubles, highlighting rising fiscal pressure on profitable sectors and increasing policy unpredictability for investors, lenders and joint-venture partners.
Rare Earths and Critical Inputs
U.S. trade officials have stressed the need to preserve access to Chinese rare earth minerals even as tariffs remain in place. This exposes manufacturers to concentrated upstream dependency in magnets and advanced components, making stockpiling, supplier diversification, and geopolitical contingency planning increasingly important.
Frozen Assets And Reconstruction Funding
Tehran is pressing for access to billions in frozen assets and external financing for war-related reconstruction, with figures from $6 billion to about $120 billion cited. Any partial release could reshape import demand, state spending priorities, and opportunities in sanctioned-adjacent sectors.
Energy Security and Oil Exposure
Conflict-linked disruption in West Asia and sanctions uncertainty around Russian and Iranian crude keep India exposed to oil-price, freight and inflation shocks. With over 88% import dependence, refiners, manufacturers and logistics operators face volatility in costs, sourcing and margins.
Energy Security Drives Investment
Energy infrastructure remains a core business risk and investment opportunity. Ukraine needs at least €5.4 billion before winter to restore 6.5 GW, while private investors are funding decentralized renewables, storage, and grid upgrades to reduce blackout exposure.
Energy Security Spurs Infrastructure
Supply risks are accelerating investment in renewables, grid upgrades, and domestic energy production. Egypt targets 45% of electricity from renewables by 2028, plans 2,500 MW of additions plus 920 MW of battery storage in 2026, and is reducing arrears to foreign partners.
Major port and freight expansion
Federal and Western Australian governments committed A$1.1 billion to upgrade Anketell Road for the planned Westport terminal at Kwinana. The project should improve freight efficiency, lower congestion and emissions, and expand long-term capacity for imports, exports, defence, and critical minerals.
Regulatory Climate Hurts Investment
Only 11.8% of Amcham survey respondents chose Korea as their preferred Asia-Pacific headquarters location, while 71% cited labor inflexibility and 69% called regulation restrictive. Rising legal uncertainty could deter regional HQ decisions, capital deployment, and higher-value business operations.
Inflation and Higher-for-Longer Rates
March CPI rose 0.9% month on month and 3.3% annually, the fastest monthly gain in nearly four years. Tariff pass-through and energy costs are reducing prospects for Fed easing, keeping financing costs elevated and pressuring consumption-sensitive sectors and capital investment plans.
Geopolitical Multi-Alignment Pressures
India’s commercial posture is increasingly shaped by simultaneous engagement with the US, Europe, Russia, and Asian partners. This preserves market access and sourcing flexibility, but creates recurring exposure to sanctions policy swings, tariff bargaining, and politically sensitive supply-chain decisions.
Expansionary Budget and Debt Pressure
Japan passed a record ¥122.31 trillion fiscal 2026 budget, funded partly by ¥29.58 trillion in new bonds. While supportive for demand, the mix of high debt, rising yields and possible extra energy relief may increase fiscal sustainability and financing concerns.
China Dependence Limits Bargaining Power
Russia’s trade redirection has increased reliance on China for energy purchases, payments channels and intermediary trade flows. This concentration reduces Moscow’s bargaining power, compresses export margins through discounts, and raises strategic exposure for firms tied to Russia-linked regional supply networks.
Trade corridors depend on recovery
Israel’s trade access is improving unevenly as some foreign airlines and shipping channels resume, but Red Sea and wider Middle East security risks still distort routing. Businesses should expect volatile freight availability, elevated insurance and continued dependence on resilient alternate corridors.
Tariff Regime Volatility Deepens
Washington is rebuilding tariffs after the Supreme Court voided earlier duties, using Section 301 and expanded Section 232 metals tariffs up to 50%. The shift raises landed costs, complicates pricing, and heightens legal and compliance uncertainty for importers and manufacturers.
Trade Weaponization and Countermeasures
Beijing is expanding retaliatory trade tools beyond tariffs, including new anti-discrimination and anti-extraterritorial rules, tighter rare earth licensing, and powers to seize assets. These measures raise compliance risk, complicate diversification, and increase exposure for firms tied to U.S.-China disputes.
Data Protection Compliance Expansion
India’s Digital Personal Data Protection regime has extraterritorial reach and can apply to foreign firms serving Indian users. Penalties can reach ₹250 crore per breach, increasing compliance costs for SaaS, fintech, e-commerce, healthcare, and digital platforms handling Indian personal data.
Domestic Economic Instability Deepens
Iran’s economy is under severe pressure from inflation, currency weakness, damaged infrastructure, and fiscal strain. Reports cite food inflation above 100% earlier this year, rial depreciation, and payroll stress, weakening consumer demand, payment reliability, project viability, and business continuity.
Rare Earth Supply Leverage
China’s dominance in rare earth mining and processing is a major strategic supply-chain risk. Export controls, licensing delays, and politically contingent approvals are disrupting automotive, electronics, defense, and clean-tech sectors, forcing firms to diversify sourcing despite higher costs and limited near-term alternatives.
Coal Reliance Threatens Market Access
Coal still supplies about 68% of electricity, while captive coal capacity for nickel smelters has surged and JETP delivery remains limited. This entrenches carbon exposure for exporters, raising future risks from carbon border measures, buyer sustainability standards, and higher financing costs for emissions-intensive operations.
Tariff Circumvention Drives Enforcement
Roughly $300 billion of tariffed goods are estimated to reach the U.S. via Southeast Asia and Mexico, with suspicious transactions up 76% in early 2025. That is increasing customs scrutiny, origin-verification risk, and exposure to penalties for companies relying on transshipment or complex multi-country assembly structures.
UK-US Trade Deal Uncertainty
The UK-US trade deal has only been partially implemented, with steel tariff relief incomplete and Trump warning terms could change. Car tariffs were lowered to 10% for 100,000 vehicles, yet UK car exports to the US still fell 28.1%.
Housing Weakness and Debt Drag
Housing markets remain split: Toronto and Vancouver prices are falling while Quebec and Atlantic regions stay firmer. High household debt, softer consumer confidence, and elevated mortgage sensitivity are constraining spending, commercial activity, and real estate-linked investment decisions across major urban markets.
Severe Currency Inflation Shock
The rial has fallen to a record 1.8 million per US dollar, worsening import costs across food, medicine, electronics, and industrial inputs. Inflation reached 53% in March, with some forecasts near 69% by year-end, undermining pricing, demand, and contract viability.
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.
Energy Cost Shock Hits Competitiveness
Persistently high electricity and gas costs remain a major drag on UK industry, with some firms paying up to 50% more than EU peers and over double US levels. This pressures margins, delays investment and raises inflation-sensitive operating risks.
Regulatory and Tax Policy Fluidity
Recent policy shifts, including levy increases, targeted consumer support and evolving industrial transition measures, show a more interventionist operating environment. Businesses face faster-moving regulatory and fiscal changes affecting energy contracts, compliance costs, investment appraisals and sector-specific profitability.
Power Sector Privatization Push
Pakistan has advanced privatisation of three distribution companies—FESCO, GEPCO and IESCO—seeking private capital and operational reform. If executed credibly, the process could improve service quality and regulatory predictability, but transition risks remain for industrial users and infrastructure investors.
Localisation and Supplier Upgrade Pressure
FDI firms generated around 80% of Vietnam’s exports in Q1 2026, while domestic companies remain concentrated in lower-value activities. Multinationals increasingly need stronger Vietnamese Tier-1 suppliers, making supplier development, quality systems, and technology transfer more important for resilient operations.
CPEC 2.0 and Industrial Relocation
China’s latest industrial strategy may create openings for manufacturing relocation, green energy, and minerals under CPEC 2.0, but financing has shifted away from easy sovereign lending. Weak SEZ execution, debt exposure, and security constraints limit near-term realization for international investors.
Nuclear Supply Chain Expansion
France is reinforcing its nuclear-industrial base, including a €100 million Arabelle turbine-component factory and broader EPR2-related expansion. Abundant low-carbon electricity supports energy-intensive manufacturing competitiveness, export potential, and long-term supply security relative to higher-cost European peers.
Water Stress Hits Industry Hubs
Water management is becoming a business risk in northern Mexico. Reservoir releases tied to U.S. treaty obligations and fears over transfers from El Cuchillo raise concerns for Monterrey-area manufacturing, agribusiness, and long-term investment planning in water-intensive operations.
Energy Shock and Rupee
RBI kept rates at 5.25% but cut FY2026-27 growth to 6.9% and sees inflation at 4.6% as West Asia conflict raises oil, freight, and insurance costs. With India importing about 90% of oil, rupee volatility and input inflation remain major business risks.
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.