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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment Strategist
Defence spending is rising, but investors now need proof that budgets become contracts.
The G7 highlights security risks, yet NATO and national governments still decide the cheques.
After a strong rally, defence stocks may react more to delivery than declarations.
Defence stocks have had a powerful story: governments need more weapons, Europe needs more security, and investors need something less wobbly than artificial intelligence stocks on a caffeine crash.
The Group of Seven summit in Évian-les-Bains, France, from 15 to 17 June 2026 puts that story back under the spotlight. Leaders are discussing Ukraine, European security, the Middle East, trade tensions, economic growth and artificial intelligence. For defence stocks, this is not just another political photo album. It is a test of whether the rearmament theme can move from big words to real orders.
That matters for investors because defence has changed from a niche sector into a mainstream portfolio theme. The question is no longer whether governments want to spend more. They do. The harder question is how fast, how efficiently, and which companies actually capture the money.
Defence companies make equipment and services that governments use for national security: aircraft, missiles, radar systems, ships, ammunition, cyber tools and maintenance. This is not a normal consumer business. Customers are usually governments, sales cycles are slow, and contracts can take years to move from political promise to factory floor.
That is why the G7 is a reality check. The summit can reinforce the strategic case for higher spending, especially as Ukraine still needs military support and Europe still worries about Russia. But the G7 does not place orders for tanks or air defence systems. It can set the mood. Defence ministries write the cheques.
Markets understand the difference. On 15 June 2026, Europe’s broader market rose after a preliminary United States and Iran deal lifted sentiment and oil prices fell. Defence shares were more cautious. BAE Systems fell sharply, while Rheinmetall, Leonardo, Thales and Saab also showed how sensitive the sector has become to geopolitics. These stocks have been big winners of Europe’s rearmament cycle, so expectations are higher. When investors see even a small chance of calmer geopolitics, some take profits first and ask questions later.
That move does not kill the defence story. It simply shows that investors are becoming more selective. When fear falls, the “buy anything with a helmet” trade tends to lose some shine.
The long-term backdrop still supports defence demand. According to SIPRI, global military expenditure reached 2.887 trillion USD in 2025, up 2.9% in real terms from 2024. Europe was one of the biggest drivers, with military spending rising 14% to 864 billion USD. European NATO members alone spent 559 billion USD. These are no longer theoretical numbers on a minister’s slide deck. The money is moving, although the journey from budget line to factory revenue is still slow.
The opportunity is therefore not imaginary. Governments need more ammunition, air defence, drones, naval capacity, secure communications and battlefield software. The war in Ukraine has shown that modern conflict consumes equipment quickly. Ammunition is not very glamorous, but neither is plumbing, and everyone notices when it fails.
Still, spending plans are not the same as revenue. Defence budgets must pass through parliaments, procurement agencies, technical tests and production bottlenecks. Factories need workers, components, permits and supply chains. A company can have a huge order book and still struggle to deliver quickly.
That is the next phase for investors. The easy question was: will governments spend more? The better question is: which companies can turn spending into cash flow without disappointing on costs, deadlines or margins?
The G7 also reminds investors that defence is no longer only about traditional hardware. Modern security includes cyber defence, satellites, drones, logistics, energy infrastructure and artificial intelligence. A country can buy more tanks, but it also needs software, secure networks and spare parts. Otherwise, the tanks become expensive garden furniture.
This broadens the investment map. Large defence contractors remain central, but suppliers also matter. Companies that make sensors, semiconductors, engines, power systems, satellite technology, battlefield software and industrial components may benefit if governments rebuild defence capacity over many years.
It also changes the type of analysis required. Investors should not only ask who sells the most visible weapon. They should ask who owns scarce production capacity, who has trusted government relationships, who can scale without losing quality, and who benefits from maintenance over the full life of a system.
That last point matters. Defence platforms can generate revenue for decades through upgrades, training, spare parts and servicing. The first sale may get the headline. The long tail often pays the bills.
The first risk is valuation. Many defence stocks have already priced in years of higher spending. If contracts arrive more slowly than expected, shares can fall even if the long-term theme remains intact.
The second risk is politics. Governments may promise more defence spending, but voters also care about healthcare, housing, taxes and pensions. Fiscal pressure can delay or reshape plans. Investors should watch annual budgets, not only summit speeches.
The third risk is execution. Defence supply chains are tight, skilled labour is limited, and complex systems are hard to produce quickly. Early warning signs include margin pressure, delayed deliveries, weaker free cash flow and order intake that fails to match expectations.
Track actual defence budgets, not only political statements from summits.
Watch order intake and backlog conversion, meaning how much booked demand becomes revenue.
Compare valuation with delivery. A strong story can still become an expensive stock.
Think in baskets. Defence exposure can include contractors, suppliers, cyber, space and industrial enablers.
The G7 meeting puts defence stocks back on the front page, but the next chapter will be written in procurement offices, factories and budget documents. The theme remains powerful because the world looks less peaceful than investors would prefer, which is setting the bar rather low. But markets have moved from discovering the rearmament story to testing its delivery.
For investors, the lesson is simple: defence spending may be structural, but share prices still need discipline. In this sector, speeches can open the door, but contracts, capacity and cash flow decide who stays in the room.
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