12 Best Defense Stocks To Buy Now

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In this article, we will discuss the 12 best defense stocks to buy now. If you want to explore similar stocks, you can also take a look at 5 Best Defense Stocks To Buy Now.

A Chinese spy balloon along with 3 other unidentified high-altitude objects have been shot down by the U.S. so far. On March 14, a U.S. drone was shot down by a Russian fighter jet over the black sea. The Russian Su-27 damaged the propellor of the American MQ-9 Reaper drone, after flying in close proximity over it, and forced it down. Meanwhile, the Ukraine war is still ongoing and there is still no end in sight, rather there is a risk of the war escalating.

Defense Analyst: "There's A Pretty Good Long-Term Setup"

On February 13 Cowen's defense and aerospace analyst, Roman Schweizer appeared in an interview on CNBC and to discuss the geopolitical situation and his view on the defense sector and defense stocks. "This is a very peculiar period in time", said Schweizer as he talked about the recent airborne objects shot down in North America. Schweizer thinks that unidentified objects flying at such high altitude can pose risk to commercial air travel. Here are some comments from Roman Schweizer about the U.S. defense budget, potential budget cuts, and defense stocks:

"I'd say that the group (defense stocks) has underperformed, since the GOP (Republicans) kinda came out with wanting those what would be potentially 10% spending cuts. Really, when you look at the backlog in spending, 2 years ago the budget was up 7%, last year up 10%. We estimate there's about $37 billion in funds for Ukraine that haven't been put on contract for some of the large defense primes. So the pump is primed and as soon as we get into some of the budgetary details, if any of that overhang lifts, it certainly is gonna bode well for the companies."

Roman Schweizer is positive on the defense sector and sees it driving outperformance. Schweizer thinks the consensus is that the Ukraine war is a "multi-year conflict" and defense spending is going up in not just the U.S., but also in Japan and Europe. Schweizer also noted that the supply-chain issues and labor shortages due to COVID-19 are also fading away and the defense sector is "starting to operate better". Finally, Roman Schweizer said that he thinks "there's a pretty good long-term setup" for defense stocks.

As the Ukraine war enters its second year, geopolitical risk is rising and defense spending is going up with it. On March 13, the U.S. Department of Defense released the proposed defense budget for fiscal 2024. The Biden-Harris Administration has submitted a request to Congress to increase the defense budget for fiscal 2024 to $842 billion, up $26 billion from fiscal 2023.