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Mission Grey Daily Brief - February 26, 2025

Executive Summary

The global landscape witnessed major geopolitical and economic shifts in the past 24 hours. Canada has amplified its military support for Ukraine while sanctioning Russia's "shadow fleet," indicating Western resilience against Moscow's influence. Meanwhile, a surprising U.S. foreign policy pivot has shaken alliances, as the Trump administration cooperates with Russia on UN resolutions regarding Ukraine, signaling a dramatic shift in Washington's strategy. In economic developments, Indian imports of discounted Russian oil continue to soar despite Western sanctions, showcasing how global energy trade is adapting rapidly. Additionally, the UK's announcement of significant defense spending increases, funded by cuts to foreign aid, reflects the intensifying prioritization of military capabilities in Europe.

Analysis

1. Canada’s Military Assistance to Ukraine and Sanctions on Russia

Canada has reinforced its military commitment to Ukraine by dispatching substantial aid and imposing sanctions on Russia’s "shadow fleet," a clandestine network exporting oil despite international embargoes. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau emphasized the need for lasting peace and called for comprehensive support against Russian aggression [World News Toda...][World News Live...].

The strengthened Canadian sanctions aim to target infrastructure supporting Russia's global oil market, curbing a significant revenue stream. This move underlines a broader Western strategy aligned toward economic and financial levers to weaken the Kremlin. The development strengthens NATO unity but risks stoking further energy crisis concerns amid rising oil prices. Businesses reliant on energy imports or trade in these sectors should prepare for potential market volatility.

2. U.S. Foreign Policy Shift: Aligning with Russia at the UN

A stunning development occurred as the U.S., traditionally Ukraine’s key ally, sided with Russia at the United Nations to block a Ukraine-led resolution condemning Russian aggression. This decision follows a direct phone call between President Trump and President Putin, raising eyebrows over Washington's intentions [US shifts stanc...][Major world eve...]. The move also signals a distancing from Europe-led peace efforts.

European governments are alarmed, as Trump’s rhetoric includes demands for NATO countries to shoulder more responsibility for collective security. As European leaders rush to recalibrate their diplomatic positioning, businesses operating transatlantic supply chains or with exposure to Eastern Europe need to consider security implications and potential disruptions in the region. The pivot could additionally lead to unpredictability in energy markets and European policy frameworks.

3. UK Raises Defense Spending Amid Rising Geopolitical Tensions

In response to increasing European instability, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has pledged to raise defense spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027, marking the largest post-Cold War increment. The funding will come through painful cuts to foreign aid budgets, which will be reduced from 0.5% to 0.3% of GNI [We must stop Pu...][Starmer Plans t...].

This policy reflects a pivot toward prioritizing national security over global development, driven by the geopolitical threat posed by Russia and indirect signals of reduced U.S. military engagement in Europe. While this move may solidify the UK's stance as a NATO ally, it could diminish its soft power globally. The cuts will stagnate international development programs, likely exacerbating instability in regions already affected by poverty, climate crises, and wars.

4. Indian Oil Imports Propel Russia's Revenues Despite Western Sanctions

India remains a critical buyer of Russian oil, having imported €49 billion worth in the third year following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Despite enormous Western sanctions, Moscow continues to find alternative buyers, chiefly India, China, and Turkey. Russia’s energy sector revenues total €847 billion since the onset of the war [India News | In...].

India’s strategic shift to Russian oil reflects its attempt to secure energy supplies at lower costs amidst global volatility. However, this move brings geopolitical intricacies, as the West continues pressuring New Delhi to align with sanctions. Businesses relying on crude oil or refined derivatives need to monitor evolving trade routes and ensure compliance with regional or international policies.

Conclusions

The past day has further underscored the disintegration of longstanding geopolitical norms and alliances. Western strategic moves to corner Russia underline resilience but expose the vulnerabilities of energy-dependent economies. Meanwhile, the evolving U.S. stance challenges diplomatic coherence, adding risks for international businesses reliant on stable transatlantic links. The UK’s significant defense investments demonstrate Europe’s urgency in self-reliance amid questions over U.S. commitments.

With these tectonic shifts in mind:

  • How will Canadian and European policies evolve in the wake of the U.S.'s foreign policy pivot?
  • Could India’s deepening ties with Russia make it a focal point of Western sanctions’ expansion?
  • Will Western unity against Russia endure with splits in U.S.-Europe strategy surfacing?

These questions should guide businesses toward prudence in an increasingly fragmented global order.


Further Reading:

Themes around the World:

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Export Corridors Reconfigure Logistics

Ukraine’s trade flows increasingly rely on resilient alternative routes alongside Black Sea shipping. The Danube corridor moved more than 8.9 million tons in 2025, linking Ukraine directly into EU transport networks and supporting exports, imports and reconstruction-related cargo movements.

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Won Volatility Raises Costs

The won’s slide past 1,500 per dollar and oil-driven import inflation are lifting operating costs for energy, materials and foreign-currency liabilities. Currency instability complicates pricing, hedging and capital planning, even as exporters gain some temporary competitiveness from depreciation.

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Power Reform Still Critical

Despite reform momentum and fresh foreign tech investment, electricity reliability remains a central operational constraint, shaping site selection, backup-power spending, and production continuity. Energy insecurity continues to influence investor confidence, manufacturing competitiveness, and the economics of digital infrastructure deployment.

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Energy Tax and Regulation Debate

Debate over a proposed 25% LNG windfall tax highlights policy risk in Australia’s resources sector. Industry warns effective tax burdens could rise toward 80-90% for some firms, potentially deterring capital, affecting partner confidence and delaying upstream energy investment decisions.

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Energy Investment and Hub Strategy

Cairo is reducing arrears to foreign energy partners from $6.1 billion to about $1.3 billion and targeting full settlement by June. New gas discoveries, Cyprus linkages, and upstream incentives support Egypt’s ambition to strengthen its role as a regional energy and LNG hub.

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Coalition Budget Politics Increase Uncertainty

The Government of National Unity is pairing reform messaging with heightened policy sensitivity around fiscal choices, fuel levies and growth delivery. For investors, coalition management raises uncertainty over budget execution, regulatory timing and the consistency of business-facing reforms across sectors.

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Labor Shortages Raise Costs

Mobilization, migration, and wartime displacement continue to distort labor supply, leaving businesses short of skilled workers despite elevated unemployment. Job seekers rose 36% year over year while vacancies increased 7%, pushing wages higher in construction, defense-linked manufacturing, and public-sector activities.

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Renewables Expansion and Grid Upgrades

Egypt moved its renewable-energy target to 45% by 2028 and plans grid upgrades costing EGP 160 billion. Large wind and power-link projects improve long-term energy resilience, open infrastructure opportunities, and support lower fuel dependence for industrial investors.

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Middle East Energy Chokepoint

Conflict around the Strait of Hormuz has exposed Korea’s heavy import dependence, with around 61% of crude and 54% of naphtha linked to the route. Rising oil costs, stranded vessels and reduced LNG flows are increasing manufacturing, shipping and inflation risks.

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External Buffers and Debt Management

Foreign reserves rose to $52.83 billion in March, while authorities aim to cut external debt and reduce arrears to foreign energy partners from $6.5 billion to near zero. Stronger buffers improve payment reliability, but refinancing risk still warrants monitoring.

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Fiscal Strain and Tax Pressure

France’s 2025 public deficit narrowed to 5.1% of GDP, but debt climbed to €3.46 trillion, or 115.6% of GDP, amid record tax pressure. Rising borrowing costs, possible new tax hikes, and uncertain consolidation plans weigh on investment, margins, and policy predictability.

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Major Port Expansion Momentum

Canada is committing large-scale capital to trade corridors, led by Montreal’s Contrecoeur expansion. Backed by C$1.16 billion from the Canada Infrastructure Bank, the project will add 1.15 million TEUs and materially strengthen eastern gateway capacity by 2030.

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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.

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Digital infrastructure and AI buildout

Data-center capacity has expanded sixfold since Vision 2030, with more than SR16 billion invested and over 60 operating sites. Saudi plans for 1.8 GW by 2030 and major AI spending improve cloud and tech opportunities, while increasing competition, data demand, and localization expectations.

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Labour Code Compliance Reset

Implementation of India’s new labour codes is reshaping wage structures, social security, contract labour rules, and operating flexibility. Multinationals must adjust payroll, HR policies, shift patterns, and plant-level compliance, while potential benefits include clearer rules, wider workforce participation, and fewer legacy legal overlaps.

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Industrial Energy Relief Expands

The government expanded energy support to about 10,000 energy-intensive firms, up from 7,000, cutting bills by up to 25% or £35-£40/MWh from 2027. The £600 million scheme supports manufacturing resilience but highlights continued dependence on state intervention.

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Domestic Political-Regulatory Volatility

Ongoing political sensitivity around security policy, budget priorities, and governance reforms continues to shape Israel’s business climate. While institutions remain functional, abrupt policy shifts tied to wartime pressures can affect taxation, regulation, labor allocation, and long-term investment planning.

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Power Sector Debt Distorts Costs

Electricity circular debt reached about Rs1.889 trillion by February, up around Rs200 billion in two months, with CPEC-related liabilities at Rs543 billion. Tariff adjustments, subsidy restraint and weak recoveries will keep energy costs volatile for exporters, manufacturers and foreign investors.

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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.

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Weak Domestic Economy Limits Demand

Finland’s recovery remains subdued, with forecasts around 0.5%-0.9% growth, unemployment near 10%, and public deficits approaching 4% of GDP. For international firms, weak household spending and cautious corporate activity may constrain near-term sales, hiring plans, and expansion assumptions.

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Energy Shock Hits Costs

Middle East conflict has raised fuel shortages, freight costs and inflation risks for Thailand, pressuring exports, tourism and industrial margins. Policymakers are reconsidering subsidies and energy pricing, while businesses face higher logistics expenses, input volatility and tougher budgeting across import-dependent sectors.

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Industrial policy reshapes sectors

Government-backed industrial policy is steering capital into autos, pharmaceuticals and innovation. Authorities highlighted R$190 billion of automotive investments through 2033 and R$71.5 billion in approved innovation financing since 2023, creating localized supply opportunities but also stronger policy-driven competition.

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B50 Biodiesel Reshapes Palm Oil

Indonesia will launch B50 in July 2026, diverting millions of tons of palm oil toward domestic fuel. The policy may save about Rp48 trillion and cut diesel imports, but it could tighten export availability and alter pricing for food, chemicals, and biofuel users.

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Mining Policy And Exploration Constraints

South Africa’s mineral potential is strong, but exploration remains weak due to cadastre delays, tenure uncertainty and administrative bottlenecks. The country attracted only 1% of global exploration spending in 2023, constraining future mining output, beneficiation and critical-mineral supply chains.

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Trade corridor and sanctions risk

Trade operations remain exposed to maritime security, cross-border disruptions and sanctions-related scrutiny. Grain flows have partly stabilized, but incidents involving allegedly stolen cargoes from occupied territories and ongoing attacks on logistics nodes heighten compliance, insurance, routing and reputational risks for commodity traders.

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Coalition Politics Clouds Policy

Political frictions around budget and VAT debates within the governing coalition are adding uncertainty to fiscal policy, reform sequencing, and business planning. For investors, coalition management now matters more, because legislative delays can slow infrastructure, tax, and regulatory decisions.

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Energy Export Diversification Push

Rising oil output and tightening pipeline capacity are intensifying decisions on new export routes south and west. Western Canadian crude exports averaged 4.6 million barrels per day last year, with capacity expected to fill soon, shaping long-term energy investment, market diversification and infrastructure strategy.

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Shadow Oil Trade Expansion

Iran continues exporting roughly 1.5-2.8 million barrels per day through dark-fleet shipping, ship-to-ship transfers and opaque intermediaries, largely to China. This sustains state revenues but heightens exposure to sanctions enforcement, shipping fraud, and reputational risk for traders and insurers.

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Semiconductor Export Boom Intensifies

AI-driven chip demand is powering South Korea’s trade performance, with semiconductor exports up 152% to $8.6 billion in early April and March ICT exports reaching $43.51 billion. This strengthens investment appeal but heightens sector concentration and advanced supply-chain dependency.

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Tourism Access Diversification Improves

Solomon Airlines’ new twice-weekly Brisbane–Santo service and Qantas’ addition of 35,500 seats on Brisbane–Port Vila in 2026 improve visitor access beyond cruise arrivals. Stronger air connectivity supports destination resilience, multi-island packaging, workforce mobility, and recovery in hospitality and tourism supply chains.

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Rupee Volatility and Import Costs

Analysts expect possible rupee depreciation of 5-7%, potentially near PKR290 per dollar by June, as energy imports strain the external account. A weaker currency would raise imported raw material, machinery, and debt-servicing costs across sectors dependent on foreign inputs.

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Fiscal Constraints Limit Support

Belgium’s weak public finances are narrowing room for broad business or household relief. Officials favour temporary, targeted measures, while economists warn the energy shock could cost the state billions overall, raising uncertainty around future subsidies, taxation, and demand conditions.

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Critical Minerals Diversification Urgent

China’s tighter rare-earth controls have sharpened Japan’s supply-chain vulnerability in EVs, electronics and defence-linked industries. Tokyo is diversifying through France, Australia, the US and prospective domestic seabed resources, but transition risks remain for manufacturers dependent on Chinese inputs.

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Public Finance Limits State Support

Unlike prior crises, Paris appears to have limited capacity for broad corporate cushioning if external shocks intensify. Businesses should expect more selective intervention, tighter subsidy conditions, and greater exposure to market financing, energy volatility, and domestic demand softness.

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Energy Shock and Inflation

Middle East conflict is driving oil-price volatility for net importer Thailand, with NESDC scenarios showing 2026 GDP slowing to 1.4%-0.2% and inflation rising to 2.7%-5.8%. Higher fuel and logistics costs threaten margins, transport reliability, and broader supply-chain planning.

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Sanctions Relief Negotiation Volatility

Ceasefire and nuclear talks have reopened debate on phased sanctions relief, frozen assets and limited waivers, but policy remains highly unstable. Companies face abrupt compliance, payment and contract risks as U.S., Iranian and allied positions remain far apart.