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:
Critical minerals coercion risk
China’s rare earth and magnet controls remain the most immediate supply-chain threat. Beijing dominates about 91% of refined rare earths and 94% of permanent magnets, exposing autos, electronics, defense, and energy sectors to licensing shocks, export delays, and politically driven disruptions.
China Trade and Payments Shift
Indonesia expanded local currency settlement with China and Hong Kong, covering bilateral trade that reached US$154.5 billion in 2025, plus cross-border QRIS links. Reduced dollar dependence may ease transaction frictions, but also deepens commercial exposure to China-centered demand and policy dynamics.
State Ownership and Privatization
The government is advancing a 2026-2030 state ownership policy, wider private-sector participation, and asset recycling deals including major energy projects. This creates openings for foreign investors, but execution quality, valuation transparency, and policy consistency will determine commercial credibility.
Governance and Rule-of-Law Discount
Turkey’s investment case is supported by industrial scale and geography, but long-term capital still faces governance concerns. Business sentiment remains constrained by persistent questions around legal predictability, property rights and institutional independence, which can raise risk premiums, slow FDI decisions and shorten investment horizons.
Critical Minerals Dependency Exposed
Recent trade frictions highlighted U.S. vulnerability to Chinese rare-earth and strategic mineral processing, with China controlling about 90% of rare-earth processing globally. Companies in defense, autos, electronics, and renewables are accelerating supplier diversification, but substitution will be costly, slow, and operationally complex.
Diplomatic Frictions Affect Market Access
Israel faces growing political friction with some foreign governments and commercial partners, creating operational spillovers. Examples include Slovenia refusing an Israeli carrier landing and European restrictions on defense participation, highlighting risks of selective boycotts, licensing obstacles, and uneven access to transport and business platforms.
Policy Support amid Inflation Pressures
The government is prioritizing inflation control and FX stabilization as consumer inflation moved above 3% and nominal first-quarter growth reached 17.1%. Temporary tariff cuts, market-stabilization measures, and possible rate tightening may support resilience, but raise financing and operating-cost sensitivity for businesses.
Coalition Politics and Reform Uncertainty
Government of National Unity tensions and cabinet reshuffle pressures are complicating policy execution. Business faces slower reform delivery on infrastructure, agriculture and industry, while political fragmentation increases uncertainty around regulations, implementation timelines and public-sector accountability critical to investment decisions.
USMCA Review Uncertainty Deepens
Washington’s refusal to renew USMCA on July 1 would shift the pact into annual reviews, prolonging uncertainty for up to a decade. With nearly US$2 trillion in North American trade at stake, investment decisions, contract planning, and location strategies face heightened volatility.
Monsoon Inflation Risk Persists
Food-price volatility linked to the monsoon remains a recurring operational risk for India, with implications for consumer demand, wage expectations, and monetary conditions. Multinationals exposed to retail, agribusiness, or labor-intensive manufacturing should closely track inflation pass-through and rural purchasing trends.
Security-first regulatory tightening
Beijing is expanding controls over outbound investment, technology transfers, data flows, and overseas staffing from July 1. This security-driven approach raises compliance burdens for multinationals, complicates cross-border R&D and treasury operations, and increases legal exposure for firms handling sensitive information.
US Tariff Threats Escalate
Washington is weighing an additional 25% tariff on Brazilian goods, plus a 12.5% labor-linked surcharge, with hearings due by July 6 and potential implementation July 15. Exporters face pricing disruption, compliance pressure, and uncertainty across industrial and commodity supply chains.
Arctic LNG sanctions leakage
Despite EU restrictions, more than 8.3 million tonnes of Yamal LNG reached EU ports in January-May, up 17.9% year on year. This highlights sanctions loopholes, but also signals abrupt future enforcement risk for utilities, shippers, financiers and LNG-linked infrastructure projects.
Market volatility and currency swings
Israeli assets have turned sharply more volatile. The TA-35 fell more than 12% in dollar terms in June, the broader exchange roughly 20% over the past month, and the shekel about 3.1%, complicating hedging, valuation, import costs, and capital-allocation decisions.
Coal Dependence and Energy Transition
Indonesia’s power mix remains about 61% coal, despite a US$21.4 billion Just Energy Transition Partnership pledge, of which only around US$3.1 billion has been formally approved. Slow disbursement prolongs carbon exposure, power-cost uncertainty, and transition risk for manufacturing, mining, and data-center investors.
Energy Supply And Payment Reset
Egypt cleared $6.1 billion in arrears to foreign oil and gas partners, materially improving investor confidence. Authorities also expanded LNG regasification capacity and set a 2026 gas-security plan, reducing power disruption risks but underscoring continuing dependence on imported supply.
Energy Hub Expansion Opportunities
Turkey is positioning itself as a regional energy hub, planning roughly €80 billion in renewables and €28 billion in grids and infrastructure. Expanded Azerbaijani gas transit, LNG diversification, and cross-border interconnections create opportunities, but certification, sanctions, and geopolitics complicate execution.
Sanctions Volatility in Energy Markets
US policy on Russian oil sanctions has shifted repeatedly, reflecting tension between geopolitical pressure and energy-market stability. Temporary exemptions reportedly allowed Russia over US$2 billion in added revenue, underscoring how abrupt sanctions changes can affect shipping, pricing, and procurement strategies.
Ports and Transshipment Opportunity
Karachi and Port Qasim benefited from regional shipping disruption, with Karachi handling 2,003 ship arrivals and roughly 75% of diverted cargo. Pakistan introduced fee concessions and new feeder routes, improving maritime relevance, though sustainability depends on regional stability and infrastructure execution.
Shadow Fleet and Trade Evasion
Iran continues moving oil through shadow shipping networks using ship-to-ship transfers, disguised cargoes, shell firms and opaque ownership structures. This sustains exports but raises counterparty, environmental and sanctions-screening risks for ports, insurers, banks, commodity traders and Asian refiners.
Reform Conditionality Tightens Business
International financing is increasingly tied to tax, governance, customs, and anti-corruption reforms. Proposed measures include VAT changes, informal-economy reduction, stronger state-enterprise oversight, and utility market liberalization, affecting cost structures, compliance obligations, and the operating environment for foreign firms and domestic counterparties.
Selective Cross-Strait Business Frictions
Tighter scrutiny of mainland Chinese participation in Taiwan trade events and technology ecosystems reflects a harder cross-strait posture. For international firms, this can complicate sourcing meetings, partner access, market intelligence and commercial coordination in hardware and component supply chains.
Talent And Labor Bottlenecks
Taiwan’s semiconductor expansion is increasingly constrained by skilled labor shortages. TSMC identified talent as its biggest gap, even as it employed more than 90,000 people globally in 2025, implying continued competition for engineers, higher labor costs, and execution risk for capacity expansion.
AI Chip Export Tightening
Taipei is preparing stricter AI-chip and server export controls to China, potentially criminalizing smuggling and extending restrictions beyond Huawei and SMIC to all Chinese buyers. For manufacturers and distributors, compliance, licensing, customer screening, and retaliation risk will rise materially.
Escalating energy sanctions pressure
The EU’s proposed 21st package and new UK measures tighten pressure on Russian oil, LNG, banks, crypto channels and the shadow fleet. Even if flows continue, compliance, shipping, insurance and counterparty risks are rising materially for global traders and investors.
China Controls Reshape Technology Trade
The U.S. tightened export-control rules to block Chinese firms from acquiring advanced chips through overseas affiliates, while scrutiny of Chinese participation in subsidized U.S. projects is rising. Semiconductor, electronics, and advanced manufacturing firms face stricter licensing, supplier vetting, and localization pressure.
Macro stability but tighter conditions
Mexico’s inflation slowed to 3.94% in May, back within Banxico’s target band, yet core inflation remained elevated and rates may stay at 6.50%. This supports macro stability, but financing costs and cautious monetary conditions still constrain investment, consumption, and expansion planning.
Refinery strikes disrupt fuel market
Ukrainian drone attacks on refineries, depots and pipelines have cut refining output, triggered fuel shortages and forced export bans on gasoline and jet fuel. The disruption raises transport costs, constrains industrial activity and complicates logistics planning across Russia and occupied territories.
Red Sea shipping disruption risk
Threats to Bab al-Mandab and wider Red Sea transit remain a major trade vulnerability. With 12-15% of global trade and about 9% of seaborne oil tied to the corridor, rerouting, delays, and higher war-risk premiums could hit Israeli supply chains hard.
Security Risks Hit Trade Corridors
Persistent terrorism and insurgent activity, especially in Balochistan, continue to threaten logistics, project execution, and investor confidence. Security forces reported 32,092 operations this year, highlighting the scale of instability around border trade, CPEC routes, mining assets, and transport infrastructure.
Vision 2030 Project Reprioritisation
Saudi authorities are shifting toward more commercially pragmatic Vision 2030 projects as some headline giga-projects are scaled back or delayed. For foreign firms, this favors bankable infrastructure, transport, tourism and industrial opportunities, while raising reassessment risk for speculative real-estate and megacity bets.
India trade deal implementation
The UK-India trade pact enters into force on 15 July, liberalising 99% of UK tariffs and 90% of Indian tariffs. It should boost bilateral trade by £25.5 billion annually, with direct implications for autos, whisky, textiles, professional mobility and sourcing decisions.
Domestic inflation and rate uncertainty
The central bank cut the key rate to 14.5% in April and may ease further, yet policymakers still cite inflation and external risks. Volatile borrowing costs, ruble swings and weaker growth complicate pricing, capital budgeting, financing and consumer-market planning inside Russia.
Nearshoring Faces Infrastructure Bottlenecks
Mexico remains highly attractive for manufacturing and nearshoring, but infrastructure, energy, water, and logistics constraints are limiting expansion. Companies increasingly prefer established industrial parks over greenfield sites, indicating demand remains solid but execution risks could cap foreign direct investment and supply-chain relocation gains.
Capital Controls Pressure Financial Flows
China is intensifying controls on outbound household and corporate capital, pressuring brokers and restricting foreign securities access. Estimated resident capital outflows reached $809 billion in 2025, and tighter scrutiny could affect Hong Kong finance, treasury structures, fundraising channels and foreign-exchange planning for firms.
Russia sanctions compliance tightening
The UK imposed 70 new Russia sanctions targeting shadow fleet vessels, LNG carriers, military procurement networks and illicit finance, lifting sanctioned vessels above 600. Firms in shipping, energy, insurance and trade finance face heightened compliance, screening and enforcement exposure.