Long Wars, Long Contracts: Why Army Procurement Belongs in Your Portfolio - Part 5

5

Typhon and the Mid-Range Strike Revolution

In Section One, we set the stage by explaining why the Military Procurement Portfolio is about long-term ownership and resilience across your retirement years.
In Section Two, we envisioned a Pacific confrontation and the risk of escalation.
In Section Three, we highlighted vulnerabilities in medicine and biological threats.
In Section Four, we looked at hypersonics, precision missiles, drones, and smart munitions as both weapons and stabilizers.

Now in this section, we turn to the Typhon mid-range strike system—a truck-mounted, land-based platform that is rewriting the rules of military engagement.

 The Typhon System: A Bridge Between Ranges

Typhon, formally called the Strategic Mid-Range Fires system, fills a critical gap in America’s arsenal. Hypersonic missiles like Dark Eagle cover thousands of miles, while systems like PrSM cover a few hundred. Typhon sits in the middle—capable of striking targets more than 1,000 miles away.

How does it do this? By adapting the Navy’s Mk-41 Vertical Launch System—the same tubes that fire Tomahawk cruise missiles and SM-6 interceptors—and mounting them on a mobile Army platform. In practical terms, this means the Army can now bring naval firepower inland. Four missiles per launcher, with four launchers per battery, supported by a command vehicle. Sixteen tubes per battery—ready to deliver precision strikes against ships, bases, or long-range threats.

 Tomahawk and SM-6: Proven Tools, New Roles

The Tomahawk Land Attack Cruise Missile is a household name in defense circles. It has been in service since the 1980s, striking targets with precision at ranges up to 1,000 miles. The Tomahawk has been upgraded repeatedly with new guidance, stealth features, and electronic countermeasures. Now, with Typhon, the Army can launch Tomahawks from land—something previously reserved for Navy ships and submarines.

The SM-6, on the other hand, is one of the most versatile missiles in the world. Originally designed as a surface-to-air interceptor, it can take down aircraft, cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, and even hypersonics under the right conditions. But the SM-6 has also been adapted for surface strikes. With Typhon, the Army now has access to that flexibility, meaning land forces can project power across the sea and sky with one system.

 Deployment and Strategic Reach

In April 2024, the Army deployed Typhon to the Philippines, demonstrating its mobility and reach. The system traveled more than 8,000 miles aboard C-17 aircraft and was ready to fire within hours. From that position in Luzon, Typhon could cover the entire Luzon Strait and even parts of China’s coastline.

This is not just symbolism. It shows potential adversaries that America’s land forces can set up precision strike zones anywhere in the Pacific, quickly, and with proven missile technology. For allies, it reassures them that U.S. power is not locked to carriers at sea—it can move inland, creating overlapping layers of deterrence.

 What This Means for Retirees

For you, the retiree or pre-retiree, the importance of Typhon is not about its engineering—it’s about what it represents financially and strategically.

1. Contract Longevity – Tomahawks and SM-6s are proven programs. Their production lines are active, their upgrade paths are long, and their maintenance contracts extend for decades. When the Army adds Typhon, it injects new life and billions more in funding into already-established programs.

2. Cross-Branch Procurement – Typhon is a Navy-Army hybrid. That means funding flows from multiple branches of the Pentagon. When you hold equities in the companies that make these systems, you are tied to a revenue stream that crosses service lines and budget silos.

3. Resilience in Crisis – Unlike consumer products, missile contracts do not vanish during recessions. If anything, crises accelerate them. In times of tension, Typhon becomes more than a weapon—it becomes a reassurance to markets that America will not sit idle.

 Broader Lessons: Adaptation and Preparedness

There’s another lesson here. Typhon exists because the Army adapted a Navy system. They did not reinvent the wheel. They repurposed proven technology to meet a new challenge. For retirees, this mirrors personal planning. Sometimes the best solutions are not brand new but smart adaptations of what you already have—reallocating resources, repurposing skills, or rethinking how assets are deployed.

In retirement, just like in procurement, adaptability is strength.

 Looking Ahead

In our next section, we are going to connect the dots between these weapons systems and the broader theme of economic warfare. Because modern conflict is not just about bullets and missiles—it’s about supply chains, energy grids, semiconductors, and the infrastructure that makes everyday life possible.

As always, think again. Think about your portfolio. Think about your preparedness. And remember: resilience is built long before a crisis begins.

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