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:
China-linked commodity demand exposure
Brazil remains highly leveraged to China-facing demand in soy, iron ore, and energy, benefiting from high commodity prices but exposed to Chinese growth swings and trade-policy shifts. Corporate strategies should diversify buyers, strengthen freight optionality, and stress-test commodity revenue volatility.
USMCA review and Mexico routing
US–Mexico talks for the USMCA six‑year review are opening amid pressure to tighten rules of origin and labor provisions to curb China-linked production in Mexico. Firms using nearshoring must reassess qualification, wage-content compliance, and tariff exposure.
US–Taiwan trade pact uncertainty
The US–Taiwan Agreement on Reciprocal Trade (ART) offers tariff relief and favorable semiconductor treatment, but new US Section 301 investigations add policy uncertainty. Exporters should model downside tariff scenarios and anticipate additional documentation, audits, and negotiated market-access tradeoffs.
Petrochemical restructuring under stress
Petrochemicals face a double squeeze: China-driven oversupply and Middle East feedstock disruptions. Naphtha delays and force majeure events raise risks of ethylene and downstream plastics shortages, while government interventions (price caps, export freezes, crisis-zone designations) add policy uncertainty for operators.
Defence Industrial Integration Expanding
Australia’s parallel security and defence partnership with the EU broadens co-production, procurement and maritime cooperation, potentially linking Australian firms to Europe’s €150 billion SAFE program and lifting opportunities in dual-use technologies, shipbuilding, advanced components and resilient industrial supply chains.
Export Controls Face Enforcement Gaps
Semiconductor and AI export controls remain strategically important, but recent enforcement cases exposed major transshipment loopholes through Southeast Asia. Companies in advanced technology supply chains face tighter scrutiny, higher compliance burdens, and growing uncertainty over licensing, end-use verification, and partner risk.
China Demand Deepens Dependence
Chinese imports of Brazilian soy rose 82.7% year on year to 6.56 million tons in January-February, while US-origin flows slumped. The shift supports Brazilian export volumes but increases concentration risk, bargaining asymmetry, and exposure to Chinese sanitary, customs, and geopolitical decisions.
Offshore Wind Supply Chains Build
Enterprise Ireland’s Propel Ireland initiative aims to strengthen domestic offshore wind innovation and supply chains as the state targets up to 37GW of offshore renewables by 2050. This creates export-oriented openings in engineering, ports, components, and project services for international partners.
Foreign capital stays engaged
Foreign holdings of Thai equities reached a record 6.11 trillion baht in January 2026, equal to 37.1% of market capitalisation. Continued overseas participation supports financing conditions, but heavy foreign influence also leaves markets sensitive to global sentiment and political developments.
Power Security Versus Cost
Brazil awarded a record 19 GW in a capacity auction, while studies warn another 35 GW of dispatchable power may be needed by 2035. Greater reliance on gas and coal backup improves supply security but may raise industrial electricity costs and emissions exposure.
Russia Ukraine Campaign Spillovers
The campaign has become a proxy battle over Ukraine, Russian influence and Hungary’s Western alignment. Hungary has blocked EU Ukraine financing and sanctions steps, while allegations of Russian messaging support increase geopolitical volatility for firms exposed to energy, sanctions compliance and regional logistics.
Environmental and ESG Pressures
Rapid nickel industrialization has brought deforestation, pollution, coal-powered processing, and community disruption in hubs such as Weda Bay. Rising ESG scrutiny could affect financing access, customer compliance requirements, reputational exposure, and due-diligence obligations for companies sourcing Indonesian critical minerals.
Conditional Tech Trade Reopening
Nvidia’s restart of H200 production for approved Chinese customers shows limited reopening within strict controls, even as top-end chips remain banned. This creates uneven market access, volatile procurement cycles and planning uncertainty for AI, data-center and industrial automation investors.
Record chip investment expansion
Samsung plans at least 110 trillion won, about $73.3 billion, in 2026 facilities and R&D spending, centered on HBM, DRAM upgrades, packaging, and US fabs. The scale supports supplier opportunities, but intensifies competitive pressure, capex concentration, and technology race dynamics.
Cape Route Opportunity, Port Weakness
Middle East shipping disruptions have increased Cape traffic, with reroutings reportedly up 112%, but South Africa’s ports remain among the world’s worst performers. Congestion, outdated infrastructure and weak bunkering capacity mean many vessels bypass local ports, limiting trade and services gains.
Gas Price Pass-Through Risk
French gas prices rose from about €55 to €61/MWh after disruption in Qatar, and regulators expect household and business bill increases, potentially around 15% for some contracts. The delayed pass-through could raise autumn operating costs for manufacturers and logistics operators.
Critical Minerals Industrial Push
Ottawa and provinces are accelerating graphite, lithium and broader critical-minerals development to reduce allied dependence on China. A CAD$459 million financing package for Nouveau Monde Graphite and Ontario support for 68 exploration projects strengthen mining, processing and battery supply-chain prospects.
Labor shortages and workforce substitution
Reserve call-ups and reduced Palestinian labor access continue to strain construction, agriculture, and services. Expanded recruitment of foreign workers (notably India) supports project restarts but introduces governance, security, and HR-compliance requirements for employers and contractors.
Shipbuilding Expansion and Tariffs
Korean shipbuilders are expanding overseas capacity, including Hanwha’s Philadelphia yard, while seeking U.S. tariff relief on steel and parts. Strong vessel ordering supports exports, but material tariffs, labor costs and permitting constraints could affect margins and delivery schedules.
Security Risks to Corridors
Attacks and instability in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa continue to threaten logistics corridors, Chinese personnel and strategic infrastructure. These risks directly affect CPEC execution, insurance costs, project timelines and investor confidence, particularly in mining, transport, energy and western-route supply chains.
China Trade Tensions Deepen
US-China commercial relations remain unstable despite a court-driven tariff reprieve that cut the effective tariff rate on Chinese goods to roughly 22.3% from 32.4%. Businesses face continuing risks from retaliatory measures, rare-earth disruptions, and accelerated market diversification pressures.
Inflation and Rate Risks Rising
Higher oil prices and a weaker Taiwan dollar are increasing inflation and financing risks. The central bank raised its CPI forecast to 1.8%, while markets price possible rate hikes, potentially affecting borrowing costs, consumer demand, and currency-sensitive import and export margins.
Debt-Heavy Domestic Demand
Household debt remains around 86.8% of GDP, while 69.9% of surveyed citizens cite living costs as their top concern. Weak purchasing power, rising fuel costs and limited wage gains are restraining consumption, increasing credit stress and softening demand across consumer sectors.
Fragile Growth and Export Weakness
Macroeconomic conditions have stabilised but remain soft for investors. Real GDP growth improved from 0.5% in 2024 to 1.1% in 2025, driven mainly by consumption, while exports declined amid logistics constraints and external tariff pressure on key tradable sectors.
BOJ normalization and stronger yen
Bank of Japan policy normalization is narrowing yield differentials and undermining yen carry trades, supporting a firmer currency. A stronger yen affects exporters’ earnings translation, import costs, and hedging strategies, influencing pricing, capital allocation, and Japan-based manufacturing competitiveness.
Vision 2030 Reform Momentum
Economic reforms continue to improve Saudi Arabia’s investment climate, with GDP nearing SAR 4.7 trillion, non-oil sectors at 56% of GDP, and total investment rising to SAR 1.44 trillion in 2024, supporting long-term foreign business expansion.
Export Infrastructure Faces Security Disruption
Ukrainian drone attacks and wider war-related disruption continue to threaten Russian energy logistics, including Black Sea and Baltic facilities. Temporary stoppages at major terminals and resumed flows from damaged sites underscore elevated operational risk for exporters, insurers, port users, and commodity buyers.
Suez Canal security shock
Red Sea and Gulf conflict perceptions are cutting Suez Canal traffic and toll income, with Egypt citing about $10bn lost and experts warning ~50% traffic declines. Higher war-risk premiums and rerouting raise lead times and costs for shippers, traders, and manufacturers.
Industrial Zones and Free Zones Expansion
SCZONE and free zones remain major investment anchors, with Ain Sokhna hosting $33.06 billion of projects and public free-zone exports reaching $9.3 billion. Strong incentives and infrastructure support manufacturing and re-export strategies, but benefits depend on currency stability, energy availability, and uninterrupted trade corridors.
Red Sea Trade Route Disruption
Houthi attacks and threats around Bab el-Mandeb are raising shipping, insurance and rerouting costs for Israeli trade. With Hormuz also under pressure, importers and exporters face longer transit times, higher freight bills and greater uncertainty across Europe-Asia supply chains.
Energy system fragility and resilience
Repeated attacks hit substations, heat and power assets, causing outages across multiple regions. Protection works are scaling (over 90% completion in Sumy), yet the sector needs ~US$90.6bn over 10 years, impacting industrial uptime and capex planning.
Outbound controls and cross-border compliance
China’s export-control framework is expanding beyond minerals to dual-use items and end-user restrictions, with extraterritorial compliance implications for third-country subsidiaries. Companies face heightened screening, documentation, and potential penalties, necessitating stronger trade-compliance and customer due diligence.
Trade Diversification Beyond China
Recent policy moves show Australia accelerating diversification after earlier China-related trade disruptions and amid renewed US tariff pressures, reducing concentration risk for exporters and investors but requiring firms to recalibrate market-entry plans, compliance frameworks and partner strategies across Europe and Asia.
Tourism weakness hitting demand
Tourism, worth about 20% of GDP, remains vulnerable as higher airfares and Middle East-related rerouting weigh on arrivals. International visitors reached 7.49 million by March 11, down 4.4% year on year, affecting consumer demand, retail activity and services investment.
Critical minerals and strategic industrial policy
Korea’s government is deepening ‘economic security’ policies, pairing supply-chain diplomacy with targeted strategic-sector investments abroad. For multinationals, this means tighter screening, incentives tied to domestic capacity, and greater expectations on provenance, ESG, and resilience reporting.
Foreign investment screening intensifies
CFIUS scrutiny and outbound-investment constraints are tightening around sensitive technologies, data, and critical infrastructure. Deals can face extended timelines, mitigation requirements, and higher failure risk, affecting M&A valuations, joint ventures, and cross-border funding structures.