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Mission Grey Daily Brief - July 08, 2024

Summary of the Global Situation for Businesses and Investors

The global situation remains complex, with ongoing geopolitical tensions and economic shifts continuing to shape the landscape. The war in Ukraine persists, with a Ukrainian drone triggering explosions in Russia. China's influence continues to grow, with the country hosting high-level visits and expanding its intelligence capabilities in Cuba. France faces political uncertainty following a shock election result, while the US grapples with rising unemployment and a shift in a key economic sector.

Ukraine-Russia War

The war in Ukraine continues to be a significant concern, with a Ukrainian drone triggering explosions in a Russian village near the border. This comes as Ukrainian forces reportedly retreated from a neighborhood in the strategically important town of Chasiv Yar. Russia's strikes have targeted Ukraine's energy infrastructure, and the conflict has taken a toll on civilian infrastructure, including schools. Ukraine's Deputy Minister of Education reports that over 3,500 educational institutions have been damaged or destroyed.

China's Growing Influence

China's influence continues to expand globally, with the country set to host high-level visits from Pacific Island countries and Bangladesh. Meanwhile, China's secret spy bases in Cuba raise concerns for US policymakers, as they could play a key role in a potential conflict over Taiwan. China's Belt and Road Initiative has also been utilized to increase its engagement with Latin American countries, potentially challenging longstanding US dominance in the region.

Political Uncertainty in France

France faces a period of political uncertainty after a shock election result put the left-wing New Popular Front (NFP) in the lead. While short of an absolute majority, the NFP is projected to secure 171-187 seats in the National Assembly, raising concerns about increased government spending and deeper deficits impacting French assets and markets.

US Economic Shifts

The US economy shows signs of weakness, with unemployment rising to its highest level in over two years. Consumer demand has tapered off, and the services sector, which accounts for a significant portion of US jobs, is experiencing a slowdown. This could lead to a decrease in hiring and potential job losses. Additionally, Tesla, a foreign-owned EV car brand, has been added to a Chinese government purchase list for the first time, highlighting the cozy relationship between China and Elon Musk's company.

Risks and Opportunities

  • Risk: The ongoing Ukraine-Russia war continues to impact civilian infrastructure and energy supplies, causing disruptions and raising concerns about a potential nuclear disaster.
  • Risk: China's expanding intelligence capabilities, particularly its spy bases in Cuba, pose a threat to the US and its regional partners. A potential conflict over Taiwan could have significant implications.
  • Risk: Political uncertainty in France may lead to increased government spending and deeper deficits, impacting French assets and markets.
  • Opportunity: China's Belt and Road Initiative offers infrastructure development opportunities for Latin American countries, but businesses should be cautious of potential economic coercion and undermining of good governance.
  • Opportunity: The US remains committed to supporting Ukraine in its war against Russia, providing military, economic, political, and diplomatic assistance.
  • Opportunity: Despite rising unemployment, the US job market has shown resilience, and certain sectors, such as healthcare, continue to add jobs.

Further Reading:

A Ukrainian drone triggers warehouse explosions in Russia as a war of attrition grinds on - ABC News

A key part of America’s economy has shifted into reverse - CNN

A shock election result in France puts the left in the lead - The Economist

Alleged spy's arrest sets off alarms - Norway's News in English - Views and News from Norway

Alleged spy’s arrest sets off alarms - Views and News from Norway

Britain's new top diplomat in Poland discusses closer ties with Europe and support for Ukraine - AM 870 The ANSWER

China to host high-level visits from two Pacific Island countries, Bangladesh - Global Times

China's spy bases in Cuba could be key in a Taiwan war - Asia Times

Construction starts on first underground school in Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia - Euronews

Euro falls as France's left wing looks to score stunning election victory, raising fears of more spending and deeper deficits - Fortune

Themes around the World:

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Record foreign investment wave

Choose France delivered €93 billion across 71 announcements and more than 15,000 jobs, led by AI, logistics, health, steel, and energy. The surge improves market opportunities, but execution, permitting, and grid access will determine whether commitments translate into operations.

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Semiconductor Concentration and AI

Taiwan remains the central hub for advanced chip production underpinning AI, data centers, and high-performance computing. Major firms continue expanding locally, but the concentration of fabrication and packaging capacity keeps global manufacturers, investors, and customers exposed to outsized geopolitical and operational concentration risk.

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US Trade Deal Uncertainty

India’s near-final trade pact with the United States remains overshadowed by possible Section 301 duties of 10-12.5% and a July 24 deadline, creating tariff uncertainty for exporters, sourcing strategies, investment decisions, and long-term planning across manufacturing and services.

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Labor shortages and migration strain

Germany still needs targeted skilled immigration for care, services and industry, but political pressure to tighten asylum controls is rising. Businesses face a more complex labor environment shaped by demographic decline, workforce shortages, integration challenges and possible reforms to migration governance.

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US-China Tariff Managed Trade

Washington is preserving elevated tariffs on Chinese goods while exploring selective cuts on roughly $30 billion of non-strategic products. This managed-trade approach sustains pricing volatility, customs complexity, and sourcing uncertainty for manufacturers, importers, agribusiness, aviation, and consumer-goods companies.

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Migration Settings Drive Labor Supply

Migration remains central to Australia’s workforce model as net overseas migration stays above 300,000 and states report acute shortages, including Western Australia’s estimated 8,000-tradie gap, affecting project delivery, wage pressures, skills access, and business expansion timelines.

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Russia Sanctions and Secondary Tariff Risk

Congress and the administration are developing tougher Russia measures, including possible 500% tariffs tied to Russian imports or countries purchasing Russian commodities. Even if not fully enacted, the proposal heightens sanctions risk for energy traders, shippers, insurers, and globally exposed compliance teams.

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Energy exports increasingly constrained

Russia still earns heavily from hydrocarbons, but oil and gas flows face tighter enforcement, infrastructure damage and shrinking European market access. EU gas phase-out measures, tanker scrutiny and sanctions on specialized LNG shipping increase long-term export uncertainty for investors and traders.

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US Tariff and Trade Friction

Washington has proposed additional 12.5% tariffs on Japanese goods under a forced-labor trade probe, although Tokyo says bilateral terms should hold. The episode highlights persistent US policy unpredictability, affecting export planning, pricing, and localization decisions for Japan-based manufacturers.

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Gaza War Security Overhang

Israel’s stalled Gaza ceasefire remains the dominant business risk, with military control reportedly expanding from 53% to 60% and targeted at 70%. Persistent conflict raises insurance, logistics, labor-mobility and reputational costs for investors, suppliers, shipping and regional counterparties.

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Customs Enforcement Burden Expands

A new executive order directs tighter customs enforcement against transshipment, undervaluation, forced-labor exposure, and importer-of-record abuse. Companies should expect higher bond requirements, expanded beneficial-ownership disclosures, more supply-chain documentation, and greater audit and penalty risks at the U.S. border.

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Critical Inputs Geopolitical Leverage

China is increasingly using control over strategic inputs—rare earths, magnets, gallium and chips-related components—as geopolitical leverage in disputes with major trading partners. This raises the probability of sudden supply interruptions, contract instability and higher inventory costs for firms dependent on Chinese upstream processing capacity.

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Maritime Chokepoint Dependence Risks

China remains heavily dependent on vulnerable shipping lanes, especially the Strait of Malacca, which carries nearly 40% of global trade and over half of China’s oil imports. Any regional disruption would quickly affect freight costs, energy security, inventory planning and shipping reliability.

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Mercosur-EU Deal Advances Unevenly

The Mercosur-EU agreement has been provisionally applied since 1 May, lowering tariffs and opening quotas, but final approval may slip to late 2027 pending EU court review. Firms gain near-term trade openings, yet legal and political uncertainty still complicates long-term planning.

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Automotive Rules of Origin Squeeze

The automotive sector faces acute pressure from proposed tougher origin rules and higher US-content thresholds. Industry groups warn compliance would be difficult given reliance on Asian inputs, potentially raising costs, delaying sourcing shifts, and undermining Mexico’s role in North American vehicle production.

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ASEAN Partnerships Bolster Resilience

Vietnam is deepening economic links with Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines around supply chains, food security, advanced manufacturing and logistics. These agreements diversify commercial options, support regional sourcing, and reduce single-market dependence for trade, investment, and operating continuity.

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Investor Confidence in Policy Direction

Markets are reacting to perceptions of heavier state intervention, abrupt rule changes, and weaker policy credibility under Prabowo. Indonesia’s stock market has fallen sharply, ratings outlooks have turned negative, and firms are reassessing country exposure, financing timing, and expansion risk.

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US Trade Actions Escalate

Washington’s Section 301 scrutiny of Vietnam, alongside possible new tariffs tied to intellectual property and forced-labor enforcement, raises material downside risk for Vietnam-based exports to the US, customs compliance, sourcing decisions, and investor planning across electronics, furniture, apparel, and consumer goods.

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Tech Investment Shows Caution

Israel’s technology base remains strategically important, but prolonged conflict and political uncertainty are encouraging more selective capital deployment. International investors are likely to prioritize defensible sectors, tighter valuation discipline, contingency planning, and jurisdictional diversification when assessing Israeli innovation exposure.

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Fiscal resilience with tighter priorities

Despite buffers from low debt, reserves, and the sovereign wealth fund, the kingdom’s budget deficit widened to $33.5 billion in May, up 20% year on year. That supports resilience, but implies stricter capital allocation and project screening.

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Weak Growth Constrains Demand

Mexico’s macro backdrop is soft, with the OECD projecting only 0.8% GDP growth in 2026 and reports of 19 consecutive months of falling total investment. Slower domestic expansion limits local demand, reduces business visibility, and heightens sensitivity to external shocks and policy changes.

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High-cost energy undermines industry

Persistently high electricity and CO2 costs are damaging core industrial clusters, especially foundries and other energy-intensive sectors. One study warns a further 50% fall in domestic casting output could destroy around 588,000 jobs and reduce value added by about €65 billion.

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EU Investment and Minerals Alignment

The EU’s €11.5 billion Global Gateway push into clean energy, transport, pharmaceuticals, and critical minerals strengthens South Africa’s access to European capital and technology. This could accelerate industrial upgrading, but also intensifies strategic competition around minerals, standards, and export orientation.

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Black Sea Shipping Risks Persist

Ukraine’s export corridor remains commercially vital but exposed. Reported drone attacks on foreign-flagged vessels near Odesa raise freight, insurance and security costs, threatening grain, metals and container flows and complicating trade planning for exporters, importers and commodity buyers.

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EU Animal Export Restrictions

The EU will bar Brazilian animal-product exports from 3 September unless Brasília proves compliance with antimicrobial controls. Beef, poultry, fish and honey are affected, with potential losses estimated between US$2 billion and US$5 billion annually across export chains and processing sectors.

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Agricultural Labor Constraints Deepen

U.S. farms are relying more heavily on the H-2A visa system as broader immigration restrictions tighten labor supply; approvals rose 17% in fiscal 2026's first half. For food, agribusiness, and packaging firms, labor scarcity and compliance issues can elevate cost and supply volatility.

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IMF-Driven Fiscal Tightening

Pakistan’s 2026-27 budget remains tightly constrained by its $7 billion IMF programme, with tax targets of Rs15.26 trillion, provincial revenue hikes and subsidy cuts. Non-compliance could delay reviews, tranche releases and over $9 billion in partner rollovers, affecting investor confidence and liquidity planning.

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Trade Policy Volatility Persists

Frequent U.S. trade actions, appeals, proclamations and investigation deadlines are compressing planning horizons for manufacturers and investors. Exposure to Vietnam, Brazil, metals inputs and forced-labor scrutiny now requires scenario planning, contract flexibility and faster procurement realignment.

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Energy corridor and infrastructure advantage

Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline, with capacity of 7 million barrels per day, plus Red Sea export infrastructure and overseas inventories, has reduced disruption. This infrastructure advantage strengthens energy security, export reliability, and downstream investment appeal relative to more exposed Gulf markets.

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Trade Realignment Toward Europe

The EU pledged €11.5 billion for South African clean energy, transport, and pharmaceuticals under Global Gateway while negotiating improved trade terms and a critical minerals framework. This could diversify capital inflows and export partnerships, partially offsetting uncertainty in US relations.

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EU Investment Pivot Accelerates

The EU has put €11.5 billion behind South Africa’s clean energy, transport and pharmaceutical sectors, while negotiating better trade terms and a critical minerals pact. This could reshape financing flows, supplier ecosystems and export orientation toward Europe.

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Rupee Pressure and Capital Flows

Rupee weakness, foreign portfolio outflows and RBI measures to attract capital are central for cross-border financing and pricing. Currency volatility affects import costs, hedging expenses, debt servicing and the timing of investment commitments into Indian assets and operations.

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Competitive manufacturing relocation opportunity

India is pushing for tariff advantages over Asian rivals such as Vietnam, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan, which could materially influence global firms’ China-plus-one allocations, export-platform investments, and long-term supply-chain diversification into Indian manufacturing clusters.

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Semiconductor Push Deepens Localization

Vietnam is moving up the value chain through chip testing, packaging, design, and supplier development. Samsung’s planned US$1.5 billion testing facility, alongside Intel, Amkor, Hana Micron, Viettel, and FPT activity, creates opportunities for equipment, materials, talent, and industrial-service providers.

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Stricter Technology Transfer Controls

New outbound investment rules effective July 1 expand restrictions on transferring goods, technology, services and related data, including via staff deployments and training. The changes raise compliance risk for cross-border R&D, AI, semiconductor partnerships, restructurings and overseas deal-making.

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Industrial Energy And Power Shortages

War damage, gas reallocation, and electricity shortages are disrupting Iranian industry, including factories, petrochemicals, and export sectors. Power cuts and feedstock constraints reduce output reliability, delay deliveries, and raise operating costs for manufacturers, logistics providers, and regional buyers dependent on Iranian supply.