Long Wars, Long Contracts: Why Army Procurement Belongs in Your Portfolio - Part 4
4
From Weapons to Resilience
Welcome back. If you have been with us through this series, you know we are taking a deliberate, step-by-step journey into the world of U.S. Army modernization and what it means for both national security and your financial security.
In Section One, we laid the groundwork. We talked about how the Military Procurement Portfolio is designed for long-term ownership—at least five years—because these programs take time to move from concept to battlefield reality. We tied this approach to the stages of retirement: the pre-go, the go-go, the slow-go, and eventually the no-go years.
In Section Two, we imagined a scenario where things go badly in the Pacific—where a Chinese fighter or submarine escalates a standoff with the Nimitz carrier group. We asked the hard question: do we still have the calm, rational leadership needed to avoid catastrophe, as we had during the Cuban Missile Crisis? And we emphasized that investors, like retirees, need steel willpower in the face of uncertainty.
In Section Three, we shifted to a hidden vulnerability: our dependence on foreign-manufactured medications and the risks of biological or chemical threats. We tied that to preparedness in daily life—whether stocking essentials, protecting water sources, or cultivating resilience.
Now, in this section, we are going to pivot back into the weapons systems themselves. Specifically, we are going to talk about how the Army’s cutting-edge technology—hypersonic missiles, precision strike systems, drones, and advanced munitions—are not just war machines. They are also strategic economic stabilizers. For the retiree, this means holding equities in the firms that produce these systems is not only profitable but also fundamentally tied to America’s ability to recover from crises and maintain global stability.
Why Defense Procurement Is Different
When you buy shares in a consumer company, you are buying into fads, tastes, and trends. One product is hot one year and forgotten the next. Defense procurement is different. Programs like the Dark Eagle hypersonic missile or the Precision Strike Missile take a decade or more to research, test, and field. Once deployed, they remain in service for decades with continuous upgrades. That means steady contract streams, service agreements, and logistical support—cash flows that run through bull and bear markets alike.
The Dark Eagle Revisited
We introduced the Dark Eagle in Section One, but now let’s connect it to the bigger picture. This system, with a range exceeding 2,000 miles, is a direct counter to Russian and Chinese hypersonic programs. Unlike our adversaries, we have chosen to build it with conventional warheads. That requires extraordinary precision, which in turn means contracts not just for missiles, but for guidance systems, satellites, and supporting technologies. Long-term equity ownership here means exposure to entire ecosystems of suppliers, not just one company.
PrSM: Precision at Scale
The Precision Strike Missile—PrSM, sometimes called “Prism”—represents another leap forward. By replacing the aging ATACMS missile, it expands the range of Army artillery while doubling the number of rounds that launchers can carry. The upcoming anti-ship variant turns every HIMARS unit into a potential naval strike platform. For investors, this means more than just a single program; it is the backbone of future Army artillery. Contracts extend well into the 2030s.
Drones and Loitering Munitions
The Switchblade drones—small, man-portable loitering munitions—have already proven themselves in Ukraine. The Army is spending nearly a billion dollars on these systems, and more programs are coming. Why does this matter to retirees? Because these contracts are structured for replenishment. Every drone expended has to be replaced. That means recurring revenue, year after year, regardless of whether the system changes names or evolves in design.
Smart Munitions and Infrastructure Defense
The XM204 top-attack munition is a glimpse into the Army’s new mindset: smarter, safer, and networked. It offers battlefield power without the long-term risks of traditional landmines. Think of it as a “just-in-time” defense system. For investors, these programs reflect another important theme: replacement of legacy systems with smarter, more sustainable designs. That transition creates entire new revenue cycles.
Why This Matters for Retirees
Now let’s tie it back to you.
In retirement, you want two things: stability and resilience. The Military Procurement Portfolio offers both. Stability comes from long-term contracts and bipartisan political support for defense. Resilience comes from the fact that these programs address real, enduring threats. They are not subject to fashion, but to survival.
If war does not come, the contracts continue. If tensions rise, procurement accelerates. Either way, these holdings perform their role: preserving purchasing power and creating steady returns.
Looking Ahead
In our next section, we are going to dive deeper into Typhon, the mid-range missile system, and explain why the Army’s ability to adapt naval technology onto mobile land platforms represents not just military ingenuity, but also investment ingenuity.
So as always, think again. Review your portfolio. Review your preparedness. And remember: long-term ownership in strong companies is your best shield in uncertain times.
From Weapons to Resilience
Welcome back. If you have been with us through this series, you know we are taking a deliberate, step-by-step journey into the world of U.S. Army modernization and what it means for both national security and your financial security.
In Section One, we laid the groundwork. We talked about how the Military Procurement Portfolio is designed for long-term ownership—at least five years—because these programs take time to move from concept to battlefield reality. We tied this approach to the stages of retirement: the pre-go, the go-go, the slow-go, and eventually the no-go years.
In Section Two, we imagined a scenario where things go badly in the Pacific—where a Chinese fighter or submarine escalates a standoff with the Nimitz carrier group. We asked the hard question: do we still have the calm, rational leadership needed to avoid catastrophe, as we had during the Cuban Missile Crisis? And we emphasized that investors, like retirees, need steel willpower in the face of uncertainty.
In Section Three, we shifted to a hidden vulnerability: our dependence on foreign-manufactured medications and the risks of biological or chemical threats. We tied that to preparedness in daily life—whether stocking essentials, protecting water sources, or cultivating resilience.
Now, in this section, we are going to pivot back into the weapons systems themselves. Specifically, we are going to talk about how the Army’s cutting-edge technology—hypersonic missiles, precision strike systems, drones, and advanced munitions—are not just war machines. They are also strategic economic stabilizers. For the retiree, this means holding equities in the firms that produce these systems is not only profitable but also fundamentally tied to America’s ability to recover from crises and maintain global stability.
Why Defense Procurement Is Different
When you buy shares in a consumer company, you are buying into fads, tastes, and trends. One product is hot one year and forgotten the next. Defense procurement is different. Programs like the Dark Eagle hypersonic missile or the Precision Strike Missile take a decade or more to research, test, and field. Once deployed, they remain in service for decades with continuous upgrades. That means steady contract streams, service agreements, and logistical support—cash flows that run through bull and bear markets alike.
The Dark Eagle Revisited
We introduced the Dark Eagle in Section One, but now let’s connect it to the bigger picture. This system, with a range exceeding 2,000 miles, is a direct counter to Russian and Chinese hypersonic programs. Unlike our adversaries, we have chosen to build it with conventional warheads. That requires extraordinary precision, which in turn means contracts not just for missiles, but for guidance systems, satellites, and supporting technologies. Long-term equity ownership here means exposure to entire ecosystems of suppliers, not just one company.
PrSM: Precision at Scale
The Precision Strike Missile—PrSM, sometimes called “Prism”—represents another leap forward. By replacing the aging ATACMS missile, it expands the range of Army artillery while doubling the number of rounds that launchers can carry. The upcoming anti-ship variant turns every HIMARS unit into a potential naval strike platform. For investors, this means more than just a single program; it is the backbone of future Army artillery. Contracts extend well into the 2030s.
Drones and Loitering Munitions
The Switchblade drones—small, man-portable loitering munitions—have already proven themselves in Ukraine. The Army is spending nearly a billion dollars on these systems, and more programs are coming. Why does this matter to retirees? Because these contracts are structured for replenishment. Every drone expended has to be replaced. That means recurring revenue, year after year, regardless of whether the system changes names or evolves in design.
Smart Munitions and Infrastructure Defense
The XM204 top-attack munition is a glimpse into the Army’s new mindset: smarter, safer, and networked. It offers battlefield power without the long-term risks of traditional landmines. Think of it as a “just-in-time” defense system. For investors, these programs reflect another important theme: replacement of legacy systems with smarter, more sustainable designs. That transition creates entire new revenue cycles.
Why This Matters for Retirees
Now let’s tie it back to you.
In retirement, you want two things: stability and resilience. The Military Procurement Portfolio offers both. Stability comes from long-term contracts and bipartisan political support for defense. Resilience comes from the fact that these programs address real, enduring threats. They are not subject to fashion, but to survival.
If war does not come, the contracts continue. If tensions rise, procurement accelerates. Either way, these holdings perform their role: preserving purchasing power and creating steady returns.
Looking Ahead
In our next section, we are going to dive deeper into Typhon, the mid-range missile system, and explain why the Army’s ability to adapt naval technology onto mobile land platforms represents not just military ingenuity, but also investment ingenuity.
So as always, think again. Review your portfolio. Review your preparedness. And remember: long-term ownership in strong companies is your best shield in uncertain times.