- The US Department of Defense (DoD) has officially submitted a $1.5 trillion budget request for fiscal year 2027, which includes $1.15 trillion in base appropriations and a $350 billion supplementary funding bill, marking the largest year-on-year spending expansion since World War II.
- The structure of capital expenditures has reached a significant turning point, with a newly established "Presidential Priorities" category encompassing a $750 billion funding pool, heavily allocating funds to gold-tier missile defense, autonomous drone networks ($54 billion), and next-generation shipbuilding.
- The secondary market is repricing long-cycle contracts and congressional bargaining risks, with core defense stocks under pressure during trading. General Dynamics (GD:US) receded by 1.99%, Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII:US) fell by 3.56%, and Boeing (BA:US) recorded a 2.63% drop.
Dual-track Budget Framework and Fiscal Expenditure Baseline
The $1.5 trillion budget proposal submitted by the US Department of Defense adopts a typical dual-track design in fiscal framework. Of this, $1.15 trillion serves as the foundational, regular budget aimed primarily at covering normalized operations, personnel salary adjustments, and planned equipment procurement. An additional $350 billion is designed as a supplementary budget request, requiring an independent vote in Congress through a reconciliation bill similar to that of the previous fiscal year. It is noteworthy that the budget strategically excludes immediate combat and ammunition consumption costs related to current Iranian conflicts. The Pentagon has stated that due to delays in appropriation procedures, actual expenditures on Middle Eastern geopolitical tensions will require additional supplementary bills. Should Congress fully approve this dual-track budget, the baseline for annual defense spending by the US federal government will significantly increase, leading to a profound impact on the scale of long-term fiscal deficits.
Restructuring Capital Expenditures and Presidential Priorities
The core marginal variable of this budget cycle is the structural reconstruction of capital flow. The newly established "Presidential Priorities" act as the largest funding reservoir, totaling $750 billion. In the naval heavy assets sector, a substantial $65 billion in capital expenditure is directly allocated to the construction of 18 main battleships and 16 auxiliary vessels, dubbed the "Golden Fleet" plan by the Pentagon, marking the largest shipbuilding expansion since 1962. For aviation systems, the total R&D and procurement budget increased by 26% year-on-year to $102 billion. Lockheed Martin's (LMT:US) annual procurement of F-35 fighters is set at 85 units, while Northrop Grumman's (NOC:US) B-21 strategic bomber project received a $6.1 billion special appropriation.
Penetration of Unmanned Systems and Edge Computing
Compared to traditional hardware platforms, the budget allocation in the field of artificial intelligence and autonomous systems shows exponential growth trends. The Defense Autonomous Task Force's available funds have rapidly expanded from the previous $225 million to about $54 billion, effectively completing a comprehensive integration of the Pentagon's early "Replicator" plan. More specifically, $53.6 billion has been definitively allocated to autonomous drone platforms and theater logistics networks, with an additional $21 billion focused on next-generation ammunition and anti-drone interception technologies. The clear direction of funds indicates a shift in procurement focus towards mature off-the-shelf technologies rather than long-cycle basic theoretical research. If these technologies can be quickly commissioned, the data flow efficiency of defense systems and frontline strike precision may experience significant intergenerational improvements.
Long-term Contract Lock-ins and Secondary Market Pricing
Faced with enormous budget stimuli, the North American defense sector did not display the expected unilateral upward trend during trading; instead, it showed widespread valuation pullbacks. Lockheed Martin (LMT:US) recorded a 1.61% single-day decline. This market feedback mainly stems from institutional investors' revised financial models. On one hand, the Pentagon's proposal to significantly increase the proportion of multi-year procurement contracts is intended to provide medium-term stability to the supply chain. However, in the current macroeconomic environment where inflationary inertia persists, locking in long-term delivery prices prematurely might suppress the gross margin expansion of system integrators. Should labor and raw material costs remain high over the next two quarters, defense companies' free cash flow discount models may face further downward revision pressure.




