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3 Strong Defense Stocks to Buy in July

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  • RTX clocked in on its third consecutive quarter with a 17% Q1 EPS surprise, while NOC’s top ten directors are buying the stock amid a 12% year-to-date pullback.

  • A record $194 billion LMT and a new $4.8 billion PAC-3 contract support its bull case despite a Q1 EPS miss tied to the F-16 procurement.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and RTX didn’t make the cut. Pick up FREE words today.

Defense stocks are a rare corner of the market where national concerns, financial generosity and multi-year income visibility all come together at once. With the Department of Defense’s Fiscal Year 2027 investment request reaching $756.8 billion, and President Trump announcing that “Our Military Budget for 2027 should not be $1 Trillion Dollars, but instead $1.5 Trillion Dollars,” the demand base heading into July is as long as it gets. Goldman Sachs put it the same way, saying that economic security will be a dominant theme in 2026, with NATO’s commitment to defense and industrial restructuring creating huge opportunities for active managers.

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Three words confirm that thesis. Each has an instrument-verified data point that supports the “firmness” label, each has a clear July bull case, and each has a real risk that the price should be.

Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT)

Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT) trading at $545.70 as of July 2, up nearly 8% over the past month. The stock is up nearly 10% over the next year, but some recent weakness has created a more interesting entry. Forward P/E paid dividends of $171,000 per share last term and an annual yield of 3%.

Take action now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 recently named his top 10 AI stocks — and RTX didn’t make the cut. Pick up FREE words today.

The bull case is built on lag and system lock. Lockheed ended 2025 with a record backlog of $194 billion, representing more than 2.5 years of sales, and management reaffirmed FY2026 guidance of $77.5 to $80.0 billion in sales and diluted EPS of $29.35 to $30.25. Critically, the Department of Defense has signed multi-year framework agreements to increase Patriot, THAAD, and PrSM production by three to four times current rates, and Lockheed recently received a $4.8 billion PAC-3 missile production contract. CEO Jim Taiclet said the start of the year “strengthens our confidence in Lockheed Martin’s continued growth and financial performance in the coming year.”

Risks: Q1 2026 EPS of $6.44 missed the estimate of $6.70, dragged down by a negative change in revenue of $125 million for F-16s. The execution of a fixed price contract remains an eternal caveat.

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