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:
Trade fragility and tariff exposure
German exports rebounded 3.6% month on month in February, but shipments to the US fell 7.5% and to China 2.5%, underscoring fragile external demand. Trade tensions, tariff risks, and uneven overseas orders complicate export planning and inventory management.
Regional Shipping Links Improve Supply
A new New Caledonia–Vanuatu cargo service using the 1,900-ton Karaka and resumed inter-island shipping on MV Blue Wota should improve goods movement. For cruise islands, better maritime links can ease procurement bottlenecks, support reconstruction materials, and diversify sourcing beyond Port Vila.
China Tariffs and Retaliation Risk
Mexico’s new 5%-50% tariffs on 1,463 non-FTA product lines, widely affecting Chinese goods, have triggered formal retaliation warnings from Beijing. Because Mexico imports roughly $130 billion from China annually, tighter customs checks or countermeasures could disrupt electronics, auto parts and industrial inputs used in nearshoring supply chains.
War and Security Risks
Russia’s continuing strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure, ports, and industrial assets remain the overriding risk for trade, investment, and operations. Energy outages, physical damage, workforce displacement, and elevated insurance costs directly affect plant continuity, logistics planning, and counterparty reliability across sectors.
Agriculture And Land Constraints
Agribusiness remains export-critical but operates under mined land, energy shortages and logistics pressure. Roughly 137,000 square kilometers remain mined, while producers face higher processing and transport costs, even as planting stays near 16.6 million hectares and seed exports recover.
Defense Industrial Mobilization
France plans major rearmament, including up to 400% higher drone and missile stocks by 2030 and €8.5 billion for munitions. This supports aerospace and defense suppliers, but may redirect fiscal resources, industrial capacity, and regulatory priorities toward strategic sectors.
Election-year policy uncertainty
Domestic politics are adding uncertainty to economic and security policy. Budget approval pressures, coalition constraints, and election-year calculations may limit Israeli flexibility on Gaza withdrawals, spending trade-offs, and regulatory decisions, complicating strategic planning for foreign firms and institutional investors.
Nearshoring expands outside capital
Investment is spreading beyond the Greater Metropolitan Area, with more than 20 FDI projects outside it and rising free-zone inflows to regional locations. This broadens labor pools and site options, but also increases dependence on regional infrastructure, skills and supplier readiness.
Investment Reform Versus Delivery
The government is marketing an improved investment climate, citing R1.56-R1.57 trillion in pledges since 2018, but only about R600 billion has flowed into the economy. For investors, the central issue is execution, approvals, service delivery and project conversion.
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.
Petrochemical Feedstock Supply Stress
Naphtha shortages are disrupting core industrial inputs for chemicals, semiconductors and manufacturing. Korea banned naphtha exports for five months, while LG Chem shut an 800,000-ton annual cracker and emergency Russian imports of 27,000 tons offered only a short-lived buffer.
Nickel Supply Chain Cost Pressure
Nickel smelters face tighter ore quotas, rising domestic ore prices, sulfur costs linked to Middle East disruptions, and weather-related logistics constraints. These pressures are increasing procurement uncertainty and could squeeze margins, delay shipments, and disrupt downstream manufacturing and export commitments.
Red Sea Logistics Hub Expansion
Saudi Arabia is rapidly strengthening its Red Sea and overland logistics role, adding shipping services, truck corridors, rail links, and storage zones. This improves trade resilience, supports Gulf redistribution, and increases the Kingdom’s importance for regional supply-chain routing decisions.
West Asia Shipping Disruptions
Conflict in West Asia is disrupting India-linked trade lanes through higher freight rates, war-risk surcharges, container shortages, and port congestion. Basmati exporters alone report large stranded volumes and delayed payments, highlighting wider vulnerability for businesses reliant on Gulf demand and Hormuz-linked shipping routes.
Energy Nationalism and Payment Delays
Mexico’s energy framework continues to favor Pemex and CFE, limiting private participation through permit delays, regulatory centralization and tighter operating rules. U.S. authorities also cite more than $2.5 billion in overdue Pemex payments, raising counterparty, compliance and project execution risks for investors and service providers.
Downstreaming and EV Push
Indonesia is deepening downstream industrial policy to move from raw materials into batteries, refining, and EV manufacturing. New recycling partnerships, local-content rules, and incentives support long-term investment, but firms must navigate evolving compliance requirements, partner selection, and domestic processing obligations.
Semiconductor Controls Tighten Globally
New bipartisan proposals would expand US export controls on chipmaking equipment to China, covering foreign suppliers and servicing restrictions. This raises compliance burdens for semiconductor, electronics, and industrial firms while reinforcing technology bifurcation across allied and Chinese supply chains.
Energy Infrastructure Vulnerability
Israel’s offshore gas system has proven exposed to wartime shutdowns. Leviathan and Karish closures cost an estimated NIS 1.5-1.7 billion, lifted power-generation costs by 22%, and disrupted exports to Egypt and Jordan, highlighting material energy-security and industrial input risks.
Energy Shock Complicates Operations
Middle East conflict and partial disruption around the Strait of Hormuz are pushing up energy, shipping, and fertilizer costs, even as US LNG and crude exports rise. Companies face higher transport and input expenses, especially in chemicals, agriculture, manufacturing, and trade-intensive sectors.
USMCA Review and Tariff Pressure
Mexico faces prolonged USMCA review uncertainty into 2027, with U.S. pressure on energy, autos, steel and Chinese investment. Possible tighter rules of origin, existing 25% auto tariffs and 50% steel-related duties could disrupt North American trade flows and investment planning.
Trade Diversification Amid External Shocks
Exports remain resilient and the trade balance stays in surplus, but geopolitical conflict and renewed U.S. trade scrutiny are increasing uncertainty. Businesses should expect stronger government efforts to diversify export markets and optimize trade agreements to protect demand and supply-chain continuity.
Smaller Biotech Firms Face Squeeze
Large manufacturers have already secured many exemptions, while smaller and mid-sized biotech firms face steeper compliance and financing burdens. Limited capacity to fund U.S. plants or absorb tariff shocks could trigger consolidation, licensing shifts, delayed launches, and higher counterparty risk.
US Tariff Negotiations Uncertainty
India’s unsettled interim trade framework with the United States leaves tariff exposure fluid after Section 301 probes and legal reversals. Exporters in textiles, chemicals and engineering face planning uncertainty, while investors must price in shifting market-access terms and compliance risk.
Inflation and high-rate pressure
Urban inflation rose to 13.4% in February, while policy rates remain at 19% for deposits and 20% for lending. Elevated financing costs, tariff increases and exchange-rate volatility are tightening working capital conditions and delaying investment, expansion and household consumption.
China Exposure and Trade Realignment
Mexico is tightening tariffs on roughly 1,400 non-FTA products while facing U.S. pressure to curb Chinese content in North American supply chains. This elevates compliance scrutiny for manufacturers, especially in autos, steel, electronics and strategic sectors vulnerable to transshipment allegations.
Weak Demand, Strong Exports Imbalance
China’s domestic demand remains soft despite stimulus, while exports and industrial output still shoulder growth. Consumer inflation slowed to 1.0% in March and monthly CPI fell 0.7%, signaling cautious households and raising risks of prolonged overcapacity, pricing pressure and external trade tensions.
IMF Anchors Macroeconomic Stability
Pakistan’s IMF staff-level deal would unlock $1.2 billion, taking programme disbursements to about $4.5 billion. Fiscal consolidation, tighter monetary policy, exchange-rate flexibility and tax reforms remain central, shaping import financing, investor confidence, sovereign risk pricing and corporate planning.
Fiscal Fragility and Gilt Risk
Britain remains vulnerable to market stress because of weak public finances and relatively high sovereign borrowing costs. Ten-year gilt yields near 4.77% increase the risk of tighter fiscal policy, reduced stimulus capacity, and volatility across UK assets.
Import Costs Hit US Buyers
Recent analyses show foreign exporters absorb only about 5% of US tariff costs, leaving American firms and consumers to bear most of the burden. Higher landed costs, margin compression, and selective price increases will continue shaping procurement, pricing, and contract strategies.
CUSMA Review Uncertainty Deepens
Canada faces prolonged CUSMA renegotiation risk beyond the July 1 review, with U.S. demands on dairy, procurement, digital rules, and metals. Uncertainty is already chilling capital deployment, complicating North American sourcing decisions and raising exposure for exporters and investors.
EU Market Integration Accelerates
Kyiv is advancing EU-aligned legislation on technical regulation, electricity markets and judicial enforcement. New laws supporting the ‘industrial visa-free’ regime should reduce recertification costs, improve product compliance and expand market access for Ukrainian manufacturers trading into the European Union.
Biosecurity and Market Access Controls
Australia continues to apply stringent agricultural and import standards, underscored by newly published conditions for Vietnamese pomelo access. For food, agribusiness and retail firms, strict quarantine compliance, certification and treatment rules remain central to supply-chain planning and export timing.
Automotive restructuring and job cuts
Germany’s auto sector is undergoing deep restructuring, with Mercedes cutting 5,500 jobs, Opel eliminating 650 engineering roles, and suppliers entering insolvency. Profitability pressures, weaker EV demand, and production shifts abroad are reshaping supply chains and sourcing decisions.
Energy and Nuclear Workforce Push
France is extending strategic recruitment beyond defense to energy and nuclear, where up to 100,000 hires could be needed within four years. This reinforces long-term industrial resilience and power security, but may deepen shortages in engineering, maintenance and technical supply chains.
Food security and wheat sourcing
Egypt still imports about 10 million tonnes of wheat annually, even as it targets 5 million tonnes of local procurement and holds roughly six months of strategic reserves. Commodity price volatility and shipping disruptions keep food-processing costs and subsidy pressures elevated.
Air connectivity and aviation disruption
Foreign airlines continue suspending Israel routes, while Ben Gurion operations remain vulnerable to security restrictions. Reduced capacity, volatile schedules and higher fares are disrupting executive travel, tourism, cargo connectivity and contingency planning for multinational firms operating in Israel.