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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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Infrastructure Expansion Supporting Supply

Vietnam is accelerating industrial, logistics, and transport upgrades to support trade and new investment, especially in Bac Ninh and major port corridors. Ready industrial land, digital infrastructure, and proposed direct shipping links can improve reliability, though execution remains critical.

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Semiconductor Controls Intensify Further

The United States is tightening chip restrictions through Commerce actions and the proposed MATCH Act, targeting Hua Hong, SMIC, YMTC and CXMT. Equipment suppliers with roughly 30%-35% China exposure face revenue losses, while electronics supply chains confront deeper technological bifurcation.

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Escalating Sanctions and Compliance

The EU’s 20th sanctions package expands restrictions across energy, banking, crypto, ports and trade, adding 120 listings, 20 banks and 46 vessels. International firms face higher compliance costs, broader secondary-risk exposure, and tighter screening of counterparties and logistics routes.

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Palm Biodiesel Reshapes Trade

Indonesia’s planned B50 biodiesel rollout could materially redirect palm oil from export markets into domestic fuel use. Analysts estimate additional CPO demand of 1.5–1.7 million tons this year, with implications for food inflation, edible oil trade, and biofuel-linked pricing.

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Coalition crisis and election risk

Netanyahu’s coalition is under acute strain as ultra-Orthodox parties push to dissolve the Knesset over conscription exemptions. The prospect of early elections increases policy uncertainty around taxation, regulation, budgets and public spending, delaying business decisions and complicating medium-term market-entry or investment planning.

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Semiconductor Capacity Globalization

TSMC and other firms are accelerating overseas expansion, including major U.S. investment commitments, reshaping Taiwan’s industrial footprint. This diversifies geopolitical risk, but could redirect capital, talent and supplier ecosystems away from Taiwan’s domestic manufacturing base.

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Industrial Energy Cost Shock

Germany’s 2026 growth forecast was cut to 0.5% from 1.0% as energy prices surged, with inflation projected at 2.7%. Energy-intensive sectors employing nearly 1 million people face margin compression, production risks, and renewed supply chain vulnerability.

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Oil Market And Export Volatility

Saudi business conditions remain exposed to oil and shipping volatility as OPEC+ adjusted quotas and Hormuz disruption constrained actual flows. The East-West pipeline and Red Sea exports provide buffers, but energy-linked sectors still face pricing, supply and inflation transmission risks.

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Critical Minerals Processing Buildout

Canada is scaling domestic refining of lithium, cobalt and graphite to reduce external dependence and secure EV, defence and semiconductor supply chains. Recent projects include a C$20 million Electra refinery expansion and North America’s first commercial lithium refining facility in British Columbia.

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US-EU tariff escalation risk

France faces renewed exposure to transatlantic trade disruption as Washington threatens 25% tariffs on EU vehicles and maintains elevated metals duties. Paris is pushing tougher EU countermeasures, raising uncertainty for exporters, automotive supply chains, pricing decisions, and cross-border investment planning.

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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.

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Industrial Policy Reshapes Supply Chains

The government is strengthening economic-security and industrial-policy tools, including stricter scrutiny of foreign investment, support for critical sectors, and new steel protections. For firms, this means greater policy activism, but also higher input costs and more regulatory intervention.

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Energy infrastructure vulnerability

Offshore gas facilities are strategically vital but exposed to conflict risk. Temporary shutdowns at Leviathan and Karish reportedly caused about NIS 1.5 billion in economic damage in four weeks, lifted electricity costs 22%, and disrupted gas exports to Egypt and Jordan.

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Semiconductor Concentration Drives Global Exposure

Taiwan remains the central node for advanced chip production, with officials citing roughly 76% global share including related products. This concentration sustains investment appeal, but heightens customer pressure to diversify manufacturing, deepen inventory buffers, and reassess single-island exposure in critical technology supply chains.

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Labor Rules Add Operating Uncertainty

New outsourcing regulation Permenaker 7/2026 has triggered labor protests and threats of rolling demonstrations nationwide. Unions argue the rule legalizes outsourcing, weakens legal certainty, and could raise corruption risks in local enforcement, creating additional compliance and workforce-management challenges for manufacturers and service firms.

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Energy Shock And Inflation

Thailand’s oil and gas net imports equal roughly 7% of GDP, leaving businesses exposed to Middle East-driven fuel shocks. The central bank cut growth forecasts to 1.5% and expects 2026 inflation near 2.9%, raising logistics, power, and operating costs.

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AI Infrastructure Investment Surge

France is emerging as a European AI hub, with SoftBank considering up to $100 billion and major prior commitments from Brookfield, Digital Realty, Prologis, Amazon and others. This strengthens data-center, cloud and semiconductor ecosystems, but intensifies competition for power, land, and grid connections.

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Import Liberalization and Tariff Reform

Islamabad plans to cut import duties and remove more than 2,660 non-tariff barriers, with changes beginning from June 2026 and 76 HS codes under review. The shift could improve access to machinery and inputs, while intensifying competition for protected domestic sectors and altering sourcing strategies.

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Chabahar Corridor Under Pressure

Sanctions uncertainty is undermining Chabahar’s role as a trade and transit gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia. India has invested about $120 million, but waiver expiry is delaying activity, weakening corridor reliability, and limiting infrastructure-led diversification beyond Gulf chokepoints.

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Supply Chain Diversification Pressure

Companies are still reducing direct China exposure as trade friction, sanctions risk and export controls become structural rather than temporary. China’s record surplus increasingly reflects rerouting through Southeast Asia, while multinationals face rising pressure to build dual-source manufacturing, inventory buffers and origin-traceability systems.

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Strategic Sectors Get Faster Clearances

India plans 60-day approvals for investments in rare-earth magnets, advanced battery components, electronic components, polysilicon, and capital goods. The framework could help clear roughly 600 pending applications, materially reducing project delays in sectors critical to energy transition and industrial resilience.

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Digital Trade Regulation Friction

The US has intensified criticism of Korea’s proposed network usage fee regime, calling it a trade barrier and possible Section 301 issue. The dispute could affect telecom, streaming, cloud and platform operators through higher compliance burdens and bilateral trade friction.

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Inflation and cost pressures

Israel is facing renewed price pressures in fuel, food, rent and air travel, with forecasts putting annual inflation around 2.3% to 2.5%. Rising consumer and input costs may keep interest rates elevated, constrain household demand and increase operating expenses across retail, logistics and services.

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Corruption Scrutiny Tests Confidence

High-level anti-corruption probes involving energy, real estate, and political insiders are sharpening governance concerns for investors. Investigations reportedly involve laundering of about UAH 460 million and an alleged $100 million energy-sector scheme, complicating EU ambitions and raising compliance and reputational risks.

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Energy Reliability Becomes Strategic

Power infrastructure is becoming a decisive factor for semiconductor, AI, and hyperscale data-centre investment. Vietnam is exploring advanced energy systems, including small modular reactors, while upgrading planning and regulation, because unreliable or insufficient power could constrain high-tech manufacturing expansion and operating resilience.

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IMF Reforms and Pricing

IMF-backed adjustment is reshaping operating costs through subsidy cuts, fuel hikes and more market-based pricing. March fuel prices rose by up to 17%, while industrial gas tariffs increased, affecting cement, steel, fertilizers, petrochemicals, transport economics and consumer demand.

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Fuel import vulnerability exposed

Australia’s heavy dependence on imported liquid fuels has become a frontline business risk. China supplied about 30% of jet fuel last year, while Middle East disruption and export curbs threaten aviation, mining logistics, freight continuity and broader commodity exports.

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Supply Chains Pivot Beyond China

U.S. importers are increasingly redirecting sourcing toward Vietnam, India, Mexico, and other Asian hubs as China exposure declines. This diversification improves resilience but requires new supplier qualification, logistics redesign, and geopolitical monitoring, especially where Chinese capital still supports regional production.

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Non-Oil Growth Resilience

Non-oil activities now contribute about 55% of GDP, with 2025 non-oil growth around 4.9% and April PMI returning to 51.5. For international firms, diversification improves sector opportunities, though demand remains sensitive to delayed spending and regional instability.

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Freight Costs Rise With Conflict

Middle East disruption, elevated oil prices, and persistent Red Sea rerouting are increasing fuel surcharges, tightening trucking capacity, and complicating port forecasts. US container imports rose 12.4% month on month in March, but major ports still reported annual declines, highlighting unstable logistics conditions for importers.

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Logistics Network Expansion Acceleration

Amazon plans to invest more than €15 billion in France during 2026-2028, creating over 7,000 permanent jobs and opening four large distribution centers. The expansion improves domestic fulfillment capacity and delivery speed, while raising competitive pressure across warehousing, labor, and last-mile logistics markets.

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Cape Shipping Diversions Opportunity

Red Sea and Hormuz disruptions are rerouting vessels around the Cape, adding 10–14 days to voyages and lifting fuel and insurance costs. South Africa has strategic upside from higher traffic, but weak bunkering, transshipment and port execution limit monetisation of this shift.

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Fiscal stress and sovereign risk

S&P revised Mexico’s outlook to negative while affirming investment grade, citing weak growth, slow fiscal consolidation, and continued support for Pemex and CFE. It expects a 4.8% deficit in 2026 and net public debt near 54% of GDP by 2029.

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Rising Input Cost Pressures

Saudi non-oil firms reported the sharpest cost increases in nearly 17 years, driven by higher raw-material and transport expenses amid shipping disruption. Businesses should expect tighter margins, inventory buffering and greater emphasis on pricing strategy, freight planning and supplier diversification.

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Alternative Corridor Logistics Buildout

Egypt is expanding multimodal corridors linking Europe, the Gulf, and Africa through Damietta, Safaga, Sokhna, and Trieste. These routes offer contingency value as Hormuz and Red Sea disruptions raise shipping risk, giving companies optionality in routing, warehousing, and regional distribution planning.

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Freight Capacity Tightening Nationwide

US logistics costs are rising as trucking capacity contracts, diesel prices spike, and transportation pricing accelerates. Shipper spending rose 12.9% quarter on quarter and 21.8% year on year, increasing landed costs, delivery uncertainty and margin pressure across domestic distribution networks.