For decades, the gold standard in air defense was one thing. The American Patriot.
That's starting to change. A growing list of European nations is picking a homegrown rival.
And the orders are stacking up fast.
Why Countries Are Switching
The rival is called SAMP/T. It's built by Eurosam, a European venture.
France's Thales and missile maker MBDA run it.
Think of it as Europe's answer to the Patriot. The Patriot is made by Raytheon parent RTX (RTX) and Lockheed Martin (LMT).
The main reason buyers are switching is simple: waiting. Demand for the Patriot is so high that delivery delays stretch for years.
Switzerland was told it could wait four to five years. The Netherlands rushed an order just to avoid slipping to 2033.
Part of the holdup is the war with Iran. U.S. missile stocks got pulled to defend that region.
So allies wait even longer.
Buying weapons shouldn't feel like waiting on a back-ordered car. So some countries pick the system they can actually get.
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The Order Book Is Filling Up
Denmark led the way. It chose SAMP/T over the Patriot last fall.
Then it ordered four systems worth about €1.47 billion. The first ones are due in 2028.
Luxembourg has signed on too. Norway, Hungary, Belgium, and Estonia are all in talks.
The system isn't just easier to get. It can take down fast, hard targets.
That includes ballistic and even hypersonic missiles, from up to 150 kilometers away.
Its radar can scan all around and set up in under 15 minutes. That speed matters when a threat can come from any direction.
Italy and France were the first to buy in, back in 2024. Italy's army got its first unit in January, and France got one in February.
Ukraine expects a system soon, and Turkey is back at the table about buying in.
To keep up, MBDA plans to double how many Aster missiles it makes. The goal is more than 300 a year by 2028.
That demand shows up on the books. Thales said its orders jumped 23% in the first quarter, with the Danish deal among its biggest.
Total first-quarter sales rose past 5 billion euros. Europe is clearly spending more on its own defense.
For investors, the map is shifting. Some money that once flowed to U.S. defense stocks is now landing in Europe.
What To Watch
Switzerland still wants a second layer of air defense. It says it would rather buy European.
That's another order that could land soon.
Each new buyer also makes the next one easier, as the supply chain grows.
Watching where this smart money goes shows who wins the next decade. The Patriot isn't going away.
But for the first time in years, it has real competition.
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