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:
US-Zölle und Handelsumlenkung
US-Protektionspolitik dämpft deutsche Exporte in die USA (2025: -9,4% auf €146,2 Mrd.) und kann chinesische Warenströme nach Europa umlenken. Das erhöht Preisdruck, Antidumping-Risiken und Planungsunsicherheit für Investitionen, insbesondere in Auto-, Maschinenbau- und Stahlwertschöpfung.
Black Sea corridor shipping fragility
The maritime corridor carries over 90% of agricultural exports, but repeated strikes on ports and logistics cut shipments by 20–30%, leaving a 10 million‑tonne grain surplus. Businesses face volatile freight rates, schedule unreliability, cargo security exposure, and alternative routing costs.
Critical minerals re-shoring push
Canberra is accelerating onshore processing and ‘strategic reserve’ policies for critical minerals, backed by allied frameworks and subsidies. Recent antimony shipments highlight momentum, while lithium refining faces cost pressure. Expect incentives, permitting scrutiny, and partner-linked offtake deals.
US export-control status shifts
Washington signalled removing Vietnam from its strategic export-control list, potentially easing access to dual-use technologies and advanced equipment. This could accelerate US-linked high-tech investment and supplier qualification, but also raises compliance expectations and scrutiny around end-use, re-export and security controls.
Data sovereignty pushback abroad
US diplomacy is actively opposing foreign data-localization initiatives (citing GDPR-like restrictions) to protect cross-border data flows for cloud and AI services. Firms should anticipate policy disputes, divergent privacy compliance, data-transfer mechanisms, and potential retaliation in digital trade.
Manufacturing competitiveness under cost pressure
CBI surveys show manufacturing output falling (balance -14) and order books weak (-28), with export orders down and price expectations elevated (+26). High energy costs and volatile trade conditions are constraining investment, reshoring decisions and supplier stability across industrial value chains.
Auto and EV supply-chain reshaping
U.S. tariffs and softer demand are pressuring Mexico’s auto complex: January 2026 production fell about 2.6% YoY, and exports remain U.S.-heavy. OEMs and suppliers must hedge demand, localize inputs, and manage compliance to keep preferential treatment under USMCA.
Agua, clima y fricciones EEUU
La escasez hídrica y el Tratado de 1944 añaden riesgo operativo y comercial. México se comprometió a entregar mínimo 350,000 acre‑pies anuales a EE. UU. y a saldar adeudos; Washington se reserva medidas comerciales si hay incumplimiento, afectando agroindustria y manufactura regional.
UK-EU agri-food rules alignment
London and Brussels agreed a sanitary and phytosanitary deal aligning UK food, animal-health and pesticide rules to cut border friction for perishable exports. It may reduce inspections and paperwork, but constrains regulatory divergence and complicates some third-country trade strategies.
UK–EU border friction persists
Post-Brexit trade remains burdened by customs/SPS checks and ongoing regulatory divergence. Businesses report costly documentation and shifting procedures; agri-food and pharma face particular compliance complexity. This raises lead times, inventory needs and the value of EU-based distribution footprints.
FX liquidity, inflation, and pricing volatility
After the 2024 devaluation, inflation fell from a 38% peak to about 11.9% in January 2026, aided by tighter policy and improved reserves. Nonetheless, FX availability can tighten quickly, complicating import payment timing, inventory planning, and profit repatriation.
Expropriation and legal unpredictability
State-driven confiscations and court actions are rising, with sharply higher confiscation rulings and high-profile asset seizures and redomiciliation pressure. Foreign and foreign-held structures face elevated forced-sale, governance and enforceability risks, making long-term investment protection unreliable.
Energy security: LNG lock-ins
Japan is locking in long-dated LNG supply, including Jera’s 27‑year, 3 mtpa deal with Qatar from 2028, and an METI framework for emergency extra cargoes. Lower supply risk supports data centers and chip fabs, but long contracts increase exposure to carbon policy and price indexation shifts.
Tourism-driven FX inflows resilience
Tourism remains a stabilizing hard‑currency source: 2025 revenue was $65.2bn on 63.9m visitors, with a 2026 target of $68bn. Strong inflows can support reserves and services demand, benefiting aviation, hospitality, and payments—but exposes firms to seasonality.
India–US trade pact reset
A new interim India–US trade framework cuts U.S. tariffs to ~18% on many Indian exports while India reduces tariffs and non-tariff barriers for U.S. goods. Companies should reassess rules-of-origin, pricing, market access, and compliance timelines.
Commodity export surge, value-add push
Merchandise exports reportedly rose ~55% to $13.43bn in 2025, driven by gold ($6.40bn) and coffee ($2.46bn). Opportunities grow in processing and logistics, but earnings concentration and provenance concerns heighten compliance, reputational, and FX volatility risks.
Overseas fab expansion, new hubs
TSMC’s overseas expansion accelerates (e.g., 3‑nm production planned in Japan; Arizona build‑out). This diversifies supply but adds cross‑border operational complexity: talent mobility, export-control compliance, IP security, localization requirements, and potential duplication of critical suppliers and tooling.
Cross-border corridor and border security
Thailand and Myanmar are exploring a Tachilek–Mae Sai transit corridor to move Thai fruit to China via Myanmar and expand bilateral flows. However, periodic border tensions and security policies can disrupt checkpoints, insurance costs, and delivery reliability for border supply chains.
Customs system fragility and border delays
National outages of Mexico’s customs IT systems have caused kilometer-long truck queues at key crossings like Otay and Nuevo Laredo, forcing manual processing. This raises dwell times, demurrage and inventory buffers, and increases the value of redundancy in brokers, documentation and routing.
State-asset sales and SOE restructuring
Government plans to restructure 60 state companies—40 to the Sovereign Fund of Egypt and 20 toward EGX listing—while the IMF presses for a smaller state footprint. This opens M&A and PPP opportunities but execution risk remains, including valuation, governance, and regulatory unpredictability.
Macro rates, dollar, demand swings
Fed policy uncertainty amid mixed inflation and labor signals keeps borrowing costs and the dollar volatile. This affects trade competitiveness, hedging needs, capex decisions, and consumer demand for import-heavy categories, amplifying inventory and working-capital management challenges.
Energy policy shifts and bills
Ofgem’s April price cap is forecast to drop about £117 to ~£1,641, largely from Budget measures shifting 75% of Renewables Obligation costs to taxation and ending ECO after March 2026. Network charges are rising, influencing operating costs and industrial competitiveness.
High rates and tight credit
With policy rates elevated (reports cite ~15%) to contain inflation, financing costs remain punitive for working capital and infrastructure projects. Prolonged tight money raises default risk in supply chains, compresses consumer demand, and widens Brazil’s risk premium for foreign investors.
Expanding sanctions and enforcement
U.S. “maximum pressure” is tightening via new designations of entities and vessels tied to Iranian oil/petrochemicals, with discussion of tanker seizures. This raises secondary-sanctions exposure for shippers, traders, insurers, ports, and banks handling Iran-linked cargo or payments.
Parallel imports and gray-market proliferation
Sanctions have shifted trade into gray channels, exemplified by large volumes of foreign-brand vehicles moving via China as “zero‑mileage used” cars. This expands counterfeiting, warranty and IP risks, complicates aftersales obligations, and increases enforcement and contract risks for global OEM ecosystems.
Shadow fleet maritime risk surge
Russia’s oil exports rely on aging ‘shadow fleet’ tankers, false flags and opaque traders, raising environmental, insurance and port-access risks. UK and EU are blacklisting more vessels and networks, increasing detention and disruption risk for cargoes transiting Baltic, Danish Straits and Black Sea.
Port, logistics and infrastructure expansion
Vietnam is accelerating seaport and hinterland upgrades to reduce logistics bottlenecks: planned seaport investment to 2030 totals 359.5 trillion VND (US$13.8bn). Rising vessel calls and container throughput support supply-chain resilience, but construction timelines and local congestion remain risks.
Canada–China trade recalibration
Ottawa is cautiously deepening China ties via sectoral deals, including canola concessions and limited EV access, to diversify exports. This invites U.S. political backlash and potential tariff escalation, complicating market-entry, compliance, and reputational risk management for multinationals.
Logistics and rail megaproject buildup
Government is restructuring Vietnam Railways into a national railway group to deliver major corridors including North–South high-speed rail and Lao Cai–Hanoi–Hai Phong links. Over time this can cut inland logistics costs, but construction timelines and land issues add execution risk.
Labor shortages, immigration and automation
A cabinet plan targets admission of ~1.23 million foreign workers by March 2029 across 19 shortage sectors, while new political voices advocate replacing labor with AI. Companies must plan for wage inflation, onboarding/compliance, and accelerated automation to stabilize operations.
Energy grid strikes and shortages
Repeated attacks on power and gas infrastructure drive outages, emergency repairs, and import needs. Naftogaz cites at least €3 billion in damage and over €900 million equipment needs; businesses must plan for backup power, heating disruptions, and production downtime during winters.
Managed trade and bilateral deals
The 2026 U.S. Trade Policy Agenda prioritizes reciprocal framework agreements and tougher market-access enforcement, including agriculture, digital, and overcapacity disputes. Expect frequent negotiations, compliance reviews, and sudden leverage tactics affecting partners’ market entry and long-term investment planning.
Trade remedies and export barriers
Vietnam faces intensifying trade-defense actions in key markets. Example: the US imposed antidumping duties of 47.12% on Vietnamese hard empty capsules, alongside CVDs. Similar risks can spread to steel and other goods, elevating legal costs and reshaping sourcing strategies.
Selic alta e crédito restrito
Com Selic em torno de 15% a.a., o custo financeiro pressiona consumo e investimento, reduz fôlego de empresas e encarece hedge cambial. A expectativa de cortes depende de inflação e credibilidade fiscal, afetando decisões de capex, estoques e financiamento de comércio exterior.
Fiscal consolidation and sovereign risk
Markets anticipate a 2026 budget that sustains consolidation, aided by commodity-linked revenue overperformance. Analysts project deficits narrowing toward ~3.5% of GDP (FY2026/27) and bond yields around 8%. Credible fiscal anchors support lower risk premia and financing conditions for investors.
Agenda ESG e risco Amazônia
Pressão regulatória e de investidores sobre desmatamento e rastreabilidade na cadeia agro-mineral continua elevando due diligence, cláusulas contratuais e risco reputacional. A proximidade de COP30 e instrumentos de carbono reforçam exigências de compliance socioambiental para acesso a mercados.