With a new war in Iran, a proposed U.S. defense budget of 1.5 trillion dollars for 2027, and key defense names already up 24–36% year‑to‑date, the big question is whether defense ETFs like ITA, PPA, and XAR—and the broader defense sector—can keep rallying this week and beyond, or are due for a pause. Given the combination of higher geopolitical risk and structurally rising U.S. defense spending, the balance of probabilities still points upward over the medium term, even if short‑term volatility and bouts of profit‑taking are likely after big runs.
Key Takeaways
- A war in Iran plus a proposed 1.5 trillion dollar U.S. defense budget for 2027 create a powerful fundamental tailwind for defense contractors and the ETFs that hold them (ITA, PPA, XAR).
- In the near term (this week), heightened conflict typically supports further inflows into defense ETFs, but after 20–30% year‑to‑date gains in many names, expect sharp swings and possible short‑term pullbacks.
- Over the medium term (months to a few years), sustained higher defense outlays—especially for air power, missiles, naval forces, and strategic systems—favor leaders like LMT, NOC, HII, WWD, and LHX, which are core holdings or close cousins of holdings in ITA, PPA, and XAR.
- If the Iran conflict is short and “managed,” defense stocks may still grind higher on budget expectations, but the pure “war premium” could fade; in a prolonged conflict, defense demand and investor interest likely remain elevated longer.
- For most retail traders, that argues for a constructively bullish, but not all‑in, stance on ITA, PPA, XAR and top defense names—using pullbacks to build positions rather than chasing every spike.
How the Iran War and Trump’s Budget Shape ITA, PPA, XAR, and Key Defense Stocks
Defense ETFs in focus: ITA, PPA, XAR
- ITA (iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense) leans heavily toward large defense primes—Lockheed Martin (LMT), Northrop Grumman (NOC), RTX, General Dynamics, L3Harris (LHX) and others—so it’s highly sensitive to big‑ticket Pentagon spending on fighters, missiles, and strategic systems.
- PPA (Invesco Aerospace & Defense) mixes primes with more diversified aerospace and defense suppliers, benefiting from both military budgets and commercial aerospace demand.
- XAR (SPDR S&P Aerospace & Defense) is more equal‑weighted, giving relatively more impact to mid‑caps and specialized players like Huntington Ingalls (HII) and tech‑heavy suppliers; it tends to move more sharply in both directions.
With that in mind, here’s how your five highlighted stocks fit into the picture and what they suggest for these ETFs:
- Lockheed Martin (LMT) – up >36% YTD
- Prime contractor on the F‑35, PAC‑3 and other marquee programs, and a top holding in ITA and often in PPA.
- Higher air‑power, missile‑defense, and Iran‑related demand support further upside over time, but after such a big move, short‑term pullbacks are normal.
- As long as the budget path holds, LMT’s strength is a bullish signal for ITA and PPA.
- Prime contractor on the F‑35, PAC‑3 and other marquee programs, and a top holding in ITA and often in PPA.
- Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) – up >30% YTD
- The top U.S. military shipbuilder and a key name in naval expansion—carriers, destroyers, amphibious ships.
- Any push to project power in the Gulf and secure sea lanes (including near the Strait of Hormuz) supports the argument for a larger, more modern fleet, which directly benefits HII’s backlog.
- Strength in HII tends to help more equal‑weighted funds like XAR and any basket tilted toward naval modernization.
- The top U.S. military shipbuilder and a key name in naval expansion—carriers, destroyers, amphibious ships.
- Woodward (WWD) – up >28% YTD
- A “surprise leader,” benefiting from energy control systems demand in both military drones and commercial aerospace engines.
- This shows that the defense theme isn’t only about primes; high‑quality suppliers can outperform as drone production scales and commercial aviation recovers.
- That’s positive for PPA and XAR, which give more room to specialized suppliers and mid‑caps.
- A “surprise leader,” benefiting from energy control systems demand in both military drones and commercial aerospace engines.
- Northrop Grumman (NOC) – up >27% YTD
- Deeply tied to the U.S. nuclear triad: B‑21 Raider bomber, Sentinel ICBM, and strategic defense systems.
- A world where Iran is unstable and great‑power rivalry remains intense is exactly the world where NOC’s programs stay top priority.
- Continued NOC strength is a strong tailwind for ITA and PPA.
- Deeply tied to the U.S. nuclear triad: B‑21 Raider bomber, Sentinel ICBM, and strategic defense systems.
- L3Harris Technologies (LHX) – up >24% YTD
- Critical in communications, electronic warfare, and now as a key player in solid rocket motors after a 1 billion dollar government anchor investment.
- Missile defense systems like PAC‑3 and THAAD are central in any Iran scenario; ensuring domestic rocket‑motor capacity is strategically crucial.
- That makes LHX a core beneficiary of both immediate conflict and long‑term industrial policy, again supportive for ITA, PPA, and XAR.
- Critical in communications, electronic warfare, and now as a key player in solid rocket motors after a 1 billion dollar government anchor investment.
Near‑term vs. medium‑term direction
- This week:
- With war just beginning and headlines likely to be intense, defense ETFs (ITA, PPA, XAR) have a clear upward bias, but every spike can be followed by intraday or multi‑day reversals as traders take profits or react to cease‑fire rumors.
- If there’s any credible talk of “limited objectives,” timelines, or negotiations, the pure “war premium” can cool quickly even while the structural spending story stays intact.
- With war just beginning and headlines likely to be intense, defense ETFs (ITA, PPA, XAR) have a clear upward bias, but every spike can be followed by intraday or multi‑day reversals as traders take profits or react to cease‑fire rumors.
- Further out (months and into the 2027 budget window):
- The proposed 1.5 trillion dollar defense budget and focus on air power, missiles, naval forces, and strategic deterrence strongly favor a sustained uptrend in the defense complex, though not in a straight line.
- ITA and PPA should generally move higher with the primes and major systems contractors, while XAR may offer more upside (and risk) via mid‑caps and suppliers like WWD, HII, and others.
- The main risks are political (if Congress balks at the full 1.5 trillion), budget‑cycle volatility, and the possibility that the Iran war ends very quickly with a period of “war fatigue” in markets.
- The proposed 1.5 trillion dollar defense budget and focus on air power, missiles, naval forces, and strategic deterrence strongly favor a sustained uptrend in the defense complex, though not in a straight line.
A practical stance for a retail trader: constructive‑to‑bullish on defense ETFs and the five highlighted names, using dips rather than chasing blow‑off spikes, and watching Washington budget signals as closely as battlefield headlines.
How Tickeron’s AI Tools Can Help Trade Defense ETFs and Stocks in a War Scenario
War‑driven markets can whipsaw traders: gaps on headlines, sharp reversals on rumors, and big dispersion between sectors. Tickeron’s AI tools are built around Financial Learning Models (FLMs) that digest price, volume, volatility, cross‑asset flows, and news‑driven market patterns, helping retail traders stay systematic instead of emotional.
For defense ETFs and stocks like ITA, PPA, XAR, LMT, HII, WWD, NOC, and LHX, FLM‑powered bots can:
- Track sector rotation in real time – measuring how money is actually flowing between defense, energy, growth, and cyclicals as Iran headlines evolve, rather than relying on guesses.
- Detect regime shifts – for example, when the market transitions from “escalation pricing” (buy defense strongly on every headline) to “de‑escalation” (take profits in defense as cease‑fire or negotiation signals emerge).
- Automate entries, exits, and risk controls – enforcing maximum position sizes in ITA/PPA/XAR, placing stop‑loss or trailing‑stop logic, and scaling in or out based on volatility and trend strength.
As a retail investor, you can:
- Follow sector‑focused bots that specialize in aerospace & defense, letting them adjust exposure to ITA, PPA, XAR, and key holdings as conditions change.
- Use paper‑trading modes to see how strategies behave through war headlines, gap opens, and sudden reversals before committing real capital.
- Combine your macro view (e.g., belief in higher long‑term defense spending) with AI‑driven timing and risk management, so you are not trying to manually react to every news alert.
In a week and a market shaped by a new war in Iran and a huge proposed defense budget, the edge is not just being bullish or bearish on defense, but having a disciplined, data‑driven way to express and adjust that view—exactly where Tickeron’s AI tools are designed to help.
Tickeron AI Perspective