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
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
Themes around the World:
Vision 2030 Delivery Push
Saudi Arabia has entered Vision 2030’s final phase with 93% of KPIs on or above target and 90% of initiatives completed or on track, accelerating privatization, local-content mandates and sector strategies that will shape market access, procurement and long-term capital allocation.
Energy Leverage and Export Infrastructure
Energy is emerging as Canada’s strongest negotiating lever with Washington. Canadian energy exports to the U.S. reached nearly C$170 billion in 2024, while new pipeline, electricity, LNG, nuclear and West Coast export projects could materially improve supply resilience and investor appeal.
Oil Export Collapse and China Dependence
Iran’s oil revenues are under acute pressure from blockades and sanctions. March crude exports reportedly fell 45% month on month to 1.1 million barrels per day, while China absorbs more than 80%—and in some tracking, 99%—of visible sales.
Risco fiscal e arrecadação
O governo busca superávit primário em 2027 via maior arrecadação, revisão de incentivos e contenção de gastos. A receita líquida já alcançou R$ 2,57 trilhões, ou 18,3% do PIB, elevando incerteza sobre carga tributária, incentivos setoriais e previsibilidade regulatória.
War spending strains public finances
Israel’s 2026 budget prioritizes security spending at record levels, while war costs since October 2023 have exceeded hundreds of billions of shekels. Higher deficits, rising debt and constrained civilian spending could affect taxation, infrastructure timelines, procurement priorities and macroeconomic stability.
Critical Minerals Strategic Leverage
Critical minerals are becoming central to Canada’s trade posture as policymakers emphasize aluminum, tungsten, oil, and other strategic inputs. This strengthens Canada’s bargaining power in industrial negotiations, but also raises scrutiny over resource security, downstream processing, and foreign investment positioning.
Nuclear Talks Shape Business Outlook
Diplomatic negotiations over sanctions relief, uranium limits and maritime access remain a major swing factor for Iran’s business environment. Any breakthrough could improve trade conditions and asset values, while failure would prolong restrictions, policy volatility and geopolitical risk exposure.
Energy and Grid Reconstruction
Energy systems remain strategically exposed but also central to near-term investment. New EU-EIB packages exceeding €600 million target grids, efficiency, and winter resilience, while energy attracted more than a quarter of applications to a US-Ukraine reconstruction fund, highlighting both risk and commercial demand.
Nickel Downstreaming Dominates Strategy
Indonesia is doubling down on nickel processing and battery supply chains, reinforced by a new Philippines corridor. With 66.7% of global nickel output and processed nickel exports at US$9.73 billion in 2025, the sector remains central to industrial investment and sourcing decisions.
Localisation and Supplier Upgrade Pressure
FDI firms generated around 80% of Vietnam’s exports in Q1 2026, while domestic companies remain concentrated in lower-value activities. Multinationals increasingly need stronger Vietnamese Tier-1 suppliers, making supplier development, quality systems, and technology transfer more important for resilient operations.
Rare Earths Supply Leverage
China is tightening rare earth licensing and quota enforcement while exploring additional choke points in solar equipment and battery technologies. With over two-thirds of global mine output and dominant refining capacity, disruptions can quickly hit autos, aerospace, electronics, and energy supply chains.
High Rates, Sticky Inflation
The central bank cut Selic to 14.50%, but inflation expectations remain deanchored, with 2026 IPCA projections at 4.8%-4.86%, above the 4.5% ceiling. Elevated borrowing costs will keep credit tight, restrain consumption, and raise capital costs for exporters and investors.
Electronics Export Expansion
Electronics exports surged 55.4% year on year by mid-April, with computers, electronics and components reaching $36.5 billion and phones $18.9 billion. Expansion by Samsung, LG, Pegatron, and Foxconn reinforces Vietnam’s export-manufacturing base, but also deepens dependence on imported components and external demand.
USMCA Tariffs Here to Stay
Washington has signaled automotive, steel and aluminum tariffs will persist through the 2026 USMCA review. Mexico sent over 2.8 million of 4 million vehicles produced in 2024 to the United States, so enduring duties will materially alter pricing, margins and investment planning.
Environmental Compliance Trade Risk
Deforestation and possible forced-labor allegations are now embedded in trade and market-access discussions with the United States and other partners. Exporters in agribusiness, mining and biofuels face rising traceability, certification and reputational requirements that can reshape sourcing and compliance costs.
Anti-Decoupling Regulatory Retaliation
New Chinese rules allow investigations, asset seizures, expulsions, and other countermeasures against foreign entities seen as undermining China’s industrial or supply chains. This raises legal and operational risk for companies pursuing China-plus-one strategies or complying with extraterritorial sanctions.
Foreign Firms Face Compliance Squeeze
Companies operating in China face growing tension between home-country sanctions, export controls, and Chinese anti-sanctions rules. The resulting compliance asymmetry increases board-level exposure, complicates internal controls, and may force difficult choices on market participation, suppliers, and partnerships.
Russia Sanctions Compliance Risk
Western pressure on Turkish banks handling Russia-linked business is intensifying, increasing secondary sanctions exposure, payment frictions, and compliance costs. Turkey’s trade with Russia is already falling, complicating re-export models, settlement channels, and supply relationships for internationally exposed firms.
Infrastructure Overhaul and Logistics
Germany is accelerating investment in railways, bridges, ports, and broader transport infrastructure, including strategic logistics upgrades. This should improve long-run supply-chain resilience, but construction bottlenecks, execution risk, and temporary transport disruption may affect manufacturers, distributors, and just-in-time operations in the interim.
Energy Import Dependence Rising
Egypt’s gas and LNG import bill is climbing sharply, with $10.7 billion earmarked for FY2026/27, about 26% above this year. Higher fuel costs, imported energy dependence, and summer supply risks raise operating expenses for industry, transport, and power-intensive investors.
Labor Uncertainty in Platform Economy
Conflicting court decisions and stalled legislation on app-based work keep labor classification uncertain, while companies spent over R$50 billion on labor litigation in 2025. The ambiguity increases legal risk, staffing costs, and automation incentives for digital, logistics, and service businesses.
Emerging Iran-Central Asia Route
Pakistan has operationalised a Gwadar-Iran-Central Asia corridor, sending its first export consignment to Uzbekistan via Iran. The route could diversify transit options and reduce Afghan dependence, but sanctions exposure, infrastructure gaps, and security risks limit immediate scalability for international firms.
Fiscal Expansion and Budget Strains
Berlin’s 2027 budget points to €543.3 billion in spending, €110.8 billion in new debt, and higher defence and infrastructure outlays. While supportive for construction, logistics, and industrial demand, rising interest costs and unresolved gaps increase medium-term tax, subsidy, and policy uncertainty.
Energy Export Boom Reshapes Trade
The Hormuz crisis has boosted US crude and LNG exports to record levels, with crude and products reaching 12.9 million barrels per day and March LNG shipments hitting 11.7 million metric tons. This strengthens US trade leverage but increases exposure to infrastructure bottlenecks and price volatility.
Trade Reorientation Toward New Partners
Turkey’s imports from Russia dropped 22.8% in the first four months of 2026, while inflows from China and others increased. This points to a broader reconfiguration of sourcing and trade corridors that will affect procurement strategies, customs planning, and supplier diversification.
Hydrocarbon Investment Revival
Cairo is trying to restore investor confidence in upstream energy by cutting arrears to foreign operators, targeting $6.2 billion of petroleum FDI and promoting new discoveries. This supports service providers and partners, though execution still depends on payment discipline and security.
CUSMA Review and Tariff Uncertainty
Canada faces elevated trade uncertainty as CUSMA review talks slip past July 1 and U.S. Section 232 tariffs remain on steel, aluminum, autos and lumber. Prolonged negotiations risk delaying investment, disrupting cross-border sourcing, and complicating North American market planning.
Tech Investment Shifts Offshore
Dollar-funded technology firms are facing sharply higher shekel-denominated wage costs, with some executives saying Israeli engineers are now about 20% costlier in dollar terms. Companies are preserving management in Israel but shifting R&D, QA, and scaling roles to cheaper offshore markets.
China trade ties remain pivotal
Canberra is stabilising relations with Beijing because bilateral trade still underpins major supply chains, investment and livelihoods. Officials say China-linked fuel, fertiliser and industrial inputs sustain Australia’s resources sector, highlighting continued exposure to Chinese policy, demand and coercive leverage.
Tariff Regime Faces Legal Flux
The Supreme Court’s ruling against IEEPA tariffs triggered an estimated $166 billion in potential refunds across 53 million shipments, yet policy uncertainty persists as alternative tariff authorities remain in play. Importers, retailers, and manufacturers face volatile landed costs, pricing decisions, and investment planning.
Labour Code Compliance Transition
India’s new labour code rules are reshaping wage, employment and workplace compliance obligations across industries. For international firms, the consolidated framework may simplify administration over time, but near-term legal interpretation, state-level implementation and labour relations risks could raise compliance costs.
Strategic Reindustrialization Fast-Track
Paris is accelerating 150 strategic industrial projects worth €71 billion through faster permitting, industrial land access, and streamlined litigation. This improves prospects for investors in batteries, data centers, defense, and clean industry, though environmental disputes may still delay execution.
Pharma Localization Pressures Expand
New Section 232 pharmaceutical tariffs materially raise pressure to localize production in the United States. Covered imports face tariffs up to 100%, while approved onshoring plans receive a temporary 20% rate, forcing life-sciences companies to reassess manufacturing footprints and capital allocation.
EV Ecosystem Expands, Rules Wobble
Toyota’s CATL-linked battery investment and planned battery exports underscore Indonesia’s EV manufacturing momentum, supported by strong electrified vehicle sales growth. Yet regulatory inconsistency, including local taxation uncertainty for electric cars, risks undermining consumer adoption, investor confidence, and regional competitiveness against Vietnam and Thailand.
US Trade Deal Rebalancing
Thailand is prioritizing a reciprocal trade agreement with the United States after bilateral trade exceeded $93.6-$110 billion in 2025. Talks target tariffs, automotive standards, pharmaceuticals and farm access, creating material implications for exporters, regulatory compliance and sourcing decisions.
Energy Security and Transition
Saudi Arabia remains central to global energy markets while building renewables, hydrogen, and gas capacity. Renewable generation rose from 3 GW to 46 GW by 2025, but regional conflict and shipping chokepoints still create volatility for exporters, manufacturers, and energy-intensive industries.