Pro Login
Home » Deep Briefs »  » Defense Stocks: Comparing 3 Profit Opportunities From America's Military Rebuild

Defense Stocks: Comparing 3 Profit Opportunities From America's Military Rebuild

Published: Dec 31, 2025 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:

America is rebuilding its defense industry at home, creating opportunities across three key areas.

Each targets different parts of the almost $1 trillion defense budget.

In this article, we'll compare three potential opportunties our market analysts have spotted in this space.

The U.S. is bringing defense manufacturing back home after decades of outsourcing.

Around $1 trillion will be allocated to our nation’s military in 2026 - much of it to bolster our defense capabilities.

That means new infrastructure will need to be built, but our military doesn’t build all of this alone.

It hires contractors like Lockheed Martin and RTX to build defense and weapon systems for it.

But our military is diversifying where it sends funds - and in 2026, several other companies could benefit from this increased defense spending.

Let's compare three companies positioned to potentially benefit from this market shift and see how they stack up.

Want to learn more about this potential investing opportunity? Our market analysts spent weeks gathering data and researching this defense shift for our Market Briefs Pro report.

You can read the full report by subscribing to Market Briefs Pro.

The Three Contenders in Defense Stocks

BWX Technologies (BWXT) - The Submarine Specialist

What they do: Make nuclear reactor components for submarines.

Main product: Reactor parts, heat exchangers, pressure vessels.

Key advantage: Only company in America making these parts.

By the numbers:

  • Contract size: $2.6 billion (July 2025, signed with the Navy)
  •  Backlog: 8 years (through 2033)
  •  2024 Revenue: $2.7 billion
  •  Stock performance: Up 85% YTD (as of Oct 20, 2025), up 260% since 2021. 

BWX has a monopoly on nuclear submarine components. 

The Navy calls their products "mission critical" because submarines literally cannot function without them. 

U.S. facilities and bringing more supply chain work in-house, which could lead to increased revenue for BWX.

Mercury Systems (MRCY) - The Electronics Brain

What they do: Build computing systems for military equipment.

Main product: Signal processors, rugged computers, electronics for weapons systems.

Key advantage: Powers systems for major defense contractors.

By the numbers:

  • Customer base: 90% Department of Defense or DoD suppliers.
  • Backlog: $1.3 billion.
  • Stock performance: Up 126% over 1 year (as of Oct 20, 2025).

Mercury makes the brains that go inside weapons made by companies like RTX and Lockheed Martin. 

Their hardware powers missile defense, radar, drones, and communication networks. 

They beat Q3 2025 Wall Street expectations and raised full-year guidance - and may benefit as the U.S. military increases defense spending here at home, instead of abroad.

HEICO Corporation (HEI) - The Military Repairman

What they do: Repair and maintain military equipment.

Main product: Approved replacement parts, rapid repair services.

Key advantage: Can do repairs in combat zones.

Equipment serviced: F-35s, F-18s, submarines, destroyers, and more.

By the numbers:

  • 2024 Revenue: $3.8 billion (up from $2.9 billion in 2023).
  • Stock performance: Up 35% YTD, up 180% over 5 years (as of Oct 20, 2025).

HEICO specializes in sustainment work that the military legally must fund. 

Their repairs keep weapons operational, and they're certified by the DoD with decades of expertise.

And if there’s one thing that’s guaranteed - weapons and defense systems will break over time.

This means that as critical defense systems need fixing, HEICO is in a position to potentially profit.

Head-to-Head Comparison Of Defense Stocks

FactorBWX (BWXT)Mercury (MRCY)HEICO (HEI)
Focus AreaNuclear submarinesElectronics/computingRepairs & maintenance
Revenue 2024$2.7B$835M$3.8B
Backlog8 years$1.3BN/A
YTD Performance+85%+126% (1-year)+35%
Key RiskNavy funding delaysCustomer concentrationBudget pressure on contractors
Competitive PositionMonopoly (only U.S. maker)Tier-2 supplier to primesCritical infrastructure status

Who Wins in Different Scenarios?

If submarine funding increases: BWX could win. They're the only option for these parts.

If modern warfare demands more electronics: Mercury could win. C4ISR systems (command, control, communications, intelligence) are growing, and Mercury powers these systems.

If conflicts increase globally: HEICO could win. More fighting means more equipment breaks and needs repairs.

The Bottom Line: Defense Stocks

All three companies may benefit as the U.S. military brings critical defense work back home. 

But they serve different roles:

  • BWX = Critical submarine parts (high monopoly, medium risk).
  • Mercury = High-tech electronics (medium specialization, customer risk).
  • HEICO = Essential repairs (stable funding, lower growth ceiling).

The best choice depends on your risk tolerance and which part of the defense budget you think will grow fastest.

Our market analysts did a deep-dive into this shift months ago - showcasing even more potential ways investors can profit from this growing opportunity in Market Briefs Pro.

What’s that? Market Briefs Pro is our weekly investing report that outlines potential investment opportunities for investors.

It gives you an edge on Wall Street by highlighting these stocks before the rest of the market catches on.

Get the latest research and data on this shift and hundreds more by subscribing to Market Briefs Pro.


Blogs

February 20, 2026
Modine (MOD) Stock: The AI Cooling Play Most Investors Are Missing

Everyone knows AI needs chips. So far, all of the investment dollars have flowed into chip companies like Nvidia as the obvious play. But the market may be overlooking a hidden investment play in AI right now: Heat. Data centers powering AI use a ton of heat - and heat kills computers. Without proper cooling, […]

Read More
February 20, 2026
Public Vs Private Company: What's The Difference?

Why This Matters to You as an Investor Some of the biggest companies you know like Amazon, Apple, Ford, Walmart, and Nike are all public. Why should you care? When you buy a stock, you're buying ownership in a public company. That means if the business does well, your shares could be worth more, which […]

Read More
February 19, 2026
3 Bank & Financial Service Stocks Investors Should Watch This Year

Something quietly changed in 2025. For nearly three years, tech stocks were the only game in town. AI hype, cloud computing, and software growth was the growth some investors were looking for.  Valuations in AI and tech have grown as a result and now, many of these companies are trading at 30 times their earnings, […]

Read More
February 19, 2026
Net Asset Value (NAV): What Every Investor Must Know

What Is Net Asset Value? When you buy a share of an ETF, you're not buying a single company.  You're buying a slice of a basket of investments - stocks, bonds, cash, or other assets - all bundled together inside one fund. Net asset value, or NAV, is how you measure what that slice is […]

Read More
February 18, 2026
Market Cap Formula: What It Is & How It Works

What Is Market Cap? There are a lot of ways that investors assess the value of a company. You can value a company's financials, its non-financials, or even use metrics like P/E ratio. But then there’s the most straightforward way to measure value: Market cap. Market cap - short for market capitalization - is the […]

Read More
February 17, 2026
What Is the S&P 500? A Simple Guide for Investors

You've heard people say "the market is up" or "the market crashed today." But what market are they actually talking about? Most of the time? They're talking about the S&P 500. It's one of the single most important numbers on Wall Street. Investors use it as a benchmark to see how the overall market is […]

Read More
February 16, 2026
Toyota (TM) Stock: Why The Japanese Auto Giant Could Take Over Wall Street

Japan's Corporate Culture Is Flipping Upside Down For decades, Japanese companies prioritized executives and employees over shareholders.  Lifetime employment, loyalty to long-term suppliers, and stable operations mattered more than maximizing profits for investors. What happened? Japanese markets have largely been overshadowed by U.S. markets. But now, corporate culture is changing in Japan and flipping returns […]

Read More
February 16, 2026
Assets Under Management (AUM): What It Means for ETF Investors

What Is AUM? Assets under management, or AUM, is how much money is in a fund. When you're researching an ETF, you need to know the fund's AUM. What you're really asking is: how much money is this fund moving around? This information has to be provided in the prospectus. Every ETF is legally required […]

Read More
February 15, 2026
How to Pay Off Credit Card Debt Fast: A Simple Guide to Financial Freedom

Your credit card company is doing something remarkable. They're earning a 20% annual return on your money, year after year after year.  And you're the one paying for it. The average American household carries $6,200 in credit card debt as of late 2025.  If you invested that same $6,200 at age 21 and never added […]

Read More
February 14, 2026
Small Cap Stocks: The AI Infrastructure Play Hiding in Plain Sight

Everyone knows AI sent chip makers to record highs.  What most people don't know is that behind every data center running AI, there's a massive infrastructure problem that needs solving. In 2024 and 2025, AI sent Nvidia and other chip makers to record highs in a tech boom that Wall Street hasn't experienced in years.  […]

Read More
1 2 3 10
Share via
Copy link