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White House order shifts focus back to defense stocks

President Donald Trump met with the CEOs of Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Honeywell at the White House on Wednesday, pressing them to speed up weapons production hours after the White House asked Congress for $87.6 billion in supplemental spending tied largely to the Iran war, according to CNBC. The timing cuts against the administration’s other […]

President Donald Trump met with the CEOs of Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Honeywell at the White House on Wednesday, pressing them to speed up weapons production hours after the White House asked Congress for $87.6 billion in supplemental spending tied largely to the Iran war, according to CNBC.

The timing cuts against the administration’s other message that day: a new ceasefire in Iran was supposed to ease the pressure on stockpiles, not add an emergency funding request on top of it.

War-driven demand and peace-driven relief rarely show up in Washington on the same afternoon, but defense stocks are pricing in both. That timing is the tension here.

Lockheed Martin (LMT) open Wednesday at $502.93, up 1.04% on the day, according to Yahoo Finance data. RTX (RTX) gained 2.51% to $186.39, and Northrop Grumman (NOC) rose 1.16% to $513.22 over the same stretch.

Those gains follow a sharper pullback. Defense shares fell more than 20% at the height of the Iran conflict, according to Barrons report, as investors weighed the risk of a wider regional war against existing demand.

The recovery since then has less to do with Wednesday’s meeting and more to do with a structural bet: stockpile replenishment outlasts any single conflict.

Lockheed and RTX production pledges still need check from Congress

The administration’s production targets remain aggressive regardless of the ceasefire. Lockheed Martin has outlined plans to triple Patriot missile interceptor production and quadruple THAAD interceptor output, according to a Seeking Alpha report.

RTX is pursuing separate arrangements to expand Tomahawk cruise missile and AMRAAM production. Industry executives support the buildout, but they are not committing capital ahead of firm contracts.

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Large-scale factory and supply chain investment requires congressional appropriations first, and several industry officials have warned that moving early could pressure free cash flow, the report noted.

That caution matters more than the meeting itself. Lockheed’s backlog already tops $194 billion, based on the company’s recent disclosures, and Northrop’s sits at $95.7 billion.

The order book was never the constraint. Cash timing is, and a ceasefire does not change that math.

Lockheed Martin, RTX, and Northrop Grumman shares rose this week as Trump pressed contractors to triple Patriot interceptor production even as an Iran ceasefire took hold.

Bloomberg / Getty Images

Washington is watching how contractors spend their cash

The administration has paired its production push with pressure on capital allocation.

Trump signed an executive order earlier this year directing agencies to flag contractors that lag on program delivery while continuing large shareholder payouts, according to Seeking Alpha.

More Defense:

This warns major defense contractors that failing to deliver on time will bring trouble if they spend cash on investors instead of production, even during peace.

The Pentagon has also pushed new industrial partnerships to add capacity outside the traditional primes.

A Defense Department-facilitated collaboration between GM Defense (GM) and Lockheed Martin is one example, aimed at meeting demand the existing supply chain cannot absorb alone.

  • The House Armed Services Committee approved a defense policy bill authorizing $1.15 trillion in spending with multi-year purchasing authority for munitions, though the full measure is unlikely to pass before autumn.
  • Supplemental funding tied directly to stockpile replenishment could arrive sooner than the broader bill, giving contractors a partial bridge before the larger authorization clears.
  • Wednesday’s meeting follows a similar White House session in March with the same group of contractors, a sign this is a sustained policy push rather than a one-time response to Iran.

The structural trade is bigger than 1 White House meeting

Defense primes already trade at 22 to 25 times forward earnings, a clear premium to their own 10-year averages.

That multiple prices in backlog visibility and replenishment cycles that don’t reset just because one conflict ends.

A ceasefire changes the headlines, not the order book. The number that actually moves these stocks over the next year is the gap between what Trump is asking contractors to build and what Congress is willing to fund on a matching timeline.

Markets have already bet that gap closes regardless of what happens in Iran next. Whether it closes fast enough to justify current multiples is the tension Wall Street still has not resolved.

Related: Iran peace deal resets gas prices

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