It’s a dream come true for buyers with heavy protection inventory holdings. On Thursday, protection shares surged after President Trump referred to as for a large $1.5 trillion protection price range subsequent 12 months.
The determine was floated in a Truth Social post on Wednesday. That will be a rise of roughly 50% over the 2026 budget of $901 billion.
“I’ve decided that, for the Good of our Nation, particularly in these very troubled and harmful instances, our Navy Price range for the 12 months 2027 shouldn’t be $1 Trillion {Dollars}, however somewhat $1.5 Trillion {Dollars}. This can enable us to construct the “Dream Navy” that we now have lengthy been entitled to and, extra importantly, that may maintain us SAFE and SECURE, no matter foe,” Trump wrote.
Presumably, the beefed-up price range would assist pay for a few of Trump’s army ambitions, which embrace a Golden Dome air protection system, and even a brand new Naval ship design. As for the way it’d be paid for, Trump’s Reality Social put up means that tariff income may assist cowl the extra prices.
The response by the markets was predictable, as protection corporations noticed share costs rise throughout pre-trading Thursday morning. As of round 11 a.m. ET, Northrop Grumman shares have been up round 3.75%, Lockheed Martin shares have been up greater than 6%, and Raytheon shares have been up 2%.
Curiously, Trump’s “dream army” put up additionally comes quickly after he additionally floated the thought of stopping protection corporations from conducting inventory buybacks or paying dividends to shareholders. That concept got here in response to the president’s frustration that protection corporations weren’t shifting rapidly sufficient, as he wrote in another Truth Social put up earlier on Wednesday.
Because it stands, it’s unclear how lifelike an enormous enhance to the protection price range is, however in keeping with reporting from Politico, many Republican members of Congress have already voiced assist for the rise, together with Home Appropriations Chair Tom Cole, Consultant Steve Womack of Arkansas, and Don Bacon of Nebraska.

