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:
Security Buildup and Defense Industrialization
Japan’s rising security spending, around ¥9.04 trillion in the main defense budget and roughly 1.9% of GDP overall, is expanding defense manufacturing, logistics and dual-use technology opportunities. It also increases geopolitical tension with China and may alter export controls, procurement and regional risk assumptions.
Critical Minerals Industrial Push
Ukraine is positioning lithium, graphite, titanium and rare-earth projects as strategic inputs for European supply chains. Companies say projects could move roughly four times faster than global norms, supported by over €150 million invested, export-credit backing and pending privatizations.
U.S. Tariff And CUSMA Risk
Canada’s trade outlook is dominated by U.S. tariff pressure and uncertain CUSMA review terms. Recent reporting cites possible harsher U.S. measures, while manufacturers face disruption across autos, metals and lumber, increasing market-access risk, compliance costs and North American supply-chain volatility.
Ports Expansion and Logistics
The planned Tecon Santos 10 terminal would require over R$6 billion and increase Santos container capacity by 50%, but auction redesign and delays may push delivery into 2026 or 2027. Until capacity improves, congestion risk and logistics costs remain important business constraints.
Targeted European Investment Push
Thailand is actively courting French and broader European investment in aerospace, alternative energy, smart grids, AI infrastructure, data centres, rail, and digital aviation. If converted into projects, these inflows could deepen industrial upgrading, improve technology transfer, and diversify foreign capital sources.
Strategic tech localization deepens
India is moving beyond assembly toward local production of semiconductors, displays, batteries, rare earth processing, and electronic components. This creates medium-term opportunities for multinationals to localize procurement and manufacturing, but also raises expectations around domestic sourcing, partnerships, and regulatory alignment.
US Trade Talks Uncertainty
Canada’s commercial outlook is dominated by volatile U.S. trade negotiations ahead of the CUSMA review. Tariffs already affect steel, aluminum, autos, copper and lumber, while Washington’s tougher posture raises compliance, pricing and market-access risks for exporters and investors.
Energy shock widens external gap
The Iran war pushed Brent nearly 50% higher, raising Turkey’s energy import bill and widening March’s current-account deficit to $9.6-$9.7 billion, about 2.6% of GDP annualized. Higher fuel, petrochemical and fertilizer costs are pressuring manufacturers, transport and trade balances.
Energy Sector Arrears Boost Confidence
Egypt cut arrears owed to foreign energy companies to roughly $700 million from $6.1 billion and secured about $19 billion in planned petroleum investment over three years. Improved payment discipline supports upstream confidence, supply security, and opportunities for international energy, services, and infrastructure firms.
Defense Demand Redirects Industrial Investment
European and NATO support is increasingly channeled toward defense production, drones and rearmament, with large portions of new assistance earmarked for military procurement. This creates opportunities in dual-use manufacturing and local partnerships, while redirecting labor, capital and state attention from civilian sectors.
FDI rules recalibrated strategically
India has eased some foreign investment restrictions while preserving strategic screening. Foreign firms with up to 10% Chinese or Hong Kong shareholding can use the automatic route, while 40 manufacturing sub-sectors receive 60-day approvals under Indian-control conditions, improving execution in targeted industries.
Non-Oil Growth With Cost Pressures
The non-oil economy returned to expansion in April, with PMI at 51.5 after 48.8 in March, but firms faced the sharpest input-cost increase since 2009. Higher freight, raw material and wage pressures will affect pricing, margins and sourcing strategies.
Industrial Competitiveness Erosion
Germany’s industrial base is losing global competitiveness. Ifo data show 38% of auto firms and 31.8% of machinery companies report worsening international position, while DIW says Germany’s share of research-intensive exports has fallen about 15% since 2015.
Red Sea Hub Expansion Accelerates
Saudi Arabia is rapidly positioning Jeddah, Yanbu, and related corridors as alternative gateways linking Asia, Europe, and Africa. More than 19 new maritime services and expanded transit offerings could improve market access, while intensifying competition with established Gulf logistics hubs.
Tech Regulation And Data Access
Canada’s proposed Bill C-22 is raising concern among major U.S. technology firms over encryption, metadata retention and cross-border data obligations. The bill could increase compliance burdens, create legal uncertainty for digital operators, and introduce a new bilateral irritant in Canada-U.S. commercial relations.
Advanced Packaging Bottlenecks
CoWoS and OSAT capacity remain structurally tight even as TSMC targets 130,000-140,000 wafers monthly by end-2026. Packaging constraints are delaying deliveries, increasing capex and pushing customers toward alternative providers, affecting lead times for AI, automotive and high-performance computing products.
Sanctions Circumvention Through Third Countries
Russia continues rerouting trade through intermediaries such as Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, the UAE, and Asian refiners processing Russian crude. This complicates origin tracing and supplier vetting, raising legal, reputational, and customs risks for companies exposed to re-exported goods or refined products.
North American Trade Review Risks
The approaching USMCA review injects uncertainty into deeply integrated North American supply chains, especially autos, energy, and industrial goods. Business groups warn that changes or fragmentation would increase compliance complexity, raise costs, and weaken the United States as a globally competitive production base.
Defense Industrial Expansion Opportunities
Japan’s defense sector is scaling rapidly, with Mitsubishi Heavy, Kawasaki Heavy, and IHI reporting combined defense order backlogs of ¥6.25 trillion, up 15% year-on-year. Eased export rules and closer U.S. cooperation open new opportunities in aerospace, components, dual-use technology, and industrial capacity.
Logistics Hub Expansion Accelerates
Saudi Arabia is rapidly strengthening multimodal trade infrastructure, including MSC’s Europe-Gulf route via Jeddah, King Abdullah Port and Dammam, plus ASMO’s 1.4 million sq m SPARK hub. This improves regional distribution options, lowers chokepoint exposure, and supports supply-chain localization.
Nickel Policy and Feedstock
Indonesia’s nickel complex remains the dominant business theme as tighter mining quotas, revised benchmark pricing, delayed royalty hikes, and possible export duties raise cost volatility. Smelters increasingly rely on Philippine ore imports, reshaping battery, stainless steel, and critical-mineral supply chains.
Shadow Trade and Compliance Complexity
Iran continues using floating storage, ship-to-ship transfers, older tankers, and alternative logistics to keep some exports moving. For international firms, these practices heighten due-diligence burdens across shipping, commodity trading, banking, and insurance, with greater exposure to hidden beneficial ownership and sanctions-evasion networks.
Energy Policy and Industrial Inputs
Energy remains a sensitive issue in trade talks and domestic policy, particularly after years of tighter state control. For manufacturers, uncertain market access and bottlenecks in electricity, fuels, and critical inputs can weaken competitiveness and slow expansion of energy-intensive operations.
Digitalized Investment Approval Reforms
India’s updated FDI process is now fully paperless with a 12-week decision target, while large proposals above Rs 5,000 crore face higher-level review. Faster procedures should aid investors, but inter-agency scrutiny and documentation demands remain substantial.
Tougher EU-China trade defenses
France is leading a push for stronger EU trade defenses against Chinese overcapacity and import concentration. Proposed faster tariffs, anti-circumvention tools and resilience instruments could reshape sourcing, market access, customs exposure and supplier strategies across machinery, autos and critical inputs.
China Dependence Deepens Asymmetry
Russia’s external trade is increasingly concentrated on China, which now accounts for roughly 27% of exports and 39% of imports. This dependence weakens Moscow’s bargaining power, compresses margins through discounted commodity sales, and heightens concentration risk for counterparties.
Sanctions enforcement and export controls
German authorities are tightening scrutiny of dual-use exports after uncovering a sanctions-evasion network that routed over 16,000 shipments worth more than €30 million to Russia. Firms face higher compliance burdens, distributor due diligence requirements and greater enforcement risk in cross-border trade.
Taiwan Tensions Raising Contingency Risk
Xi publicly warned mishandling Taiwan could lead to clashes with the United States, underscoring elevated geopolitical risk around a critical shipping and semiconductor corridor. Companies with Asia production, logistics, or sourcing footprints should intensify disruption planning for sanctions, shipping delays, and crisis escalation.
Internet Shutdowns Disrupt Commerce
Months-long internet shutdowns and digital restrictions are damaging online services, startups, payments and business communications. For international firms, this undermines operational visibility, partner coordination, digital marketing, remote service delivery and data reliability across procurement, sales and logistics activities.
Shipbuilding Gains Strategic Support
Seoul is expanding support for shipbuilding through US partnership initiatives, fiscal backing, and refund-guarantee assistance for smaller yards. This creates opportunities in maritime manufacturing, energy, and defense-linked supply chains, while reinforcing Korea’s role in strategic industrial cooperation with Washington.
US Trade Negotiations Intensify
Bangkok is accelerating reciprocal trade talks with Washington while addressing Section 301 issues, a material priority given 2025 bilateral trade of $93.65 billion. Outcomes could alter tariff exposure, sourcing decisions, and investment planning for exporters in electronics, autos, and agriculture.
Shipbuilding Support Expands Industrial Policy
Seoul is increasing support for shipbuilding through tax incentives, infrastructure spending, financing guarantees and labor measures. The sector is strategically important for exports, Korea-US investment cooperation and energy transport demand, creating opportunities across maritime supply chains, ports, engineering and finance.
Water Infrastructure Operational Risk
Gauteng’s water crisis is becoming a direct business continuity issue, with repeated outages, tanker dependence, sewage contamination and legal scrutiny. Weak municipal systems are disrupting factories, farms, tourism and urban operations, while raising compliance and site-selection risks.
Migration Reforms Target Skill Bottlenecks
Australia will keep permanent migration at 185,000 in 2026-27, with over 70% allocated to skilled entrants and faster trade-skills recognition. The measures could add up to 4,000 workers annually in key occupations, easing labor shortages in construction, infrastructure, logistics and industrial services.
Offshore Wind Industrial Expansion
Taiwan’s offshore wind sector has reached about 4.4GW of installed capacity and generated 10.28 billion kWh in 2025, making it a major industrial and resilience theme. Growth supports green-power procurement and local manufacturing, but grid bottlenecks, financing and marine-engineering gaps remain material.
Semiconductor and Strategic Industry Push
Government policy continues to prioritize strategic sectors, with companies backing stronger economic-security measures and industrial investment. Support for chips, advanced manufacturing and related supply chains should attract capital and partnerships, but it also increases scrutiny of technology transfers, subsidies and national-security exposure.