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RTX: The $272 Billion Defense Giant Generating Record Free

RTX Corporation (NYSE: RTX) has quietly become the world's largest defense contractor by market capitalization, surpassing both Lockheed Martin and Boeing. At $202.62 per share, the stock trades within 2% of its all-time high of $206.73, having nearly doubled from its 52-week low of $112.27. With a market cap of $272 billion, RTX commands a premium that reflects its unique position straddling both commercial aerospace and defense. The timing could hardly be more relevant. U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran in late February 2026 have thrust defense spending into the spotlight, with RTX's Raytheon missile systems at the center of operations. But the real story isn't a single conflict — it's a structural shift in global defense budgets. NATO members are racing to meet and exceed their 2% GDP spending targets, European allies are building out their own missile defense capabilities, and the U.S. defense budget continues to climb. RTX reported $88.6 billion in revenue for fiscal 2025, with free cash flow surging 75% year-over-year to $7.94 billion. For investors, the question is whether RTX's premium valuation — 40.9x trailing earnings — is justified by its growth trajectory and cash generation, or whether the defense rally has pushed the stock too far, too fast.

RTX stock analysisRaytheon stockdefense stocks

LMT: Lockheed Martin Touches a 52-Week High as Global

Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) is trading at $658.26, within striking distance of its 52-week high of $668.25 and more than 60% above its 52-week low of $410.11. The world's largest defense contractor has been one of the standout performers in the industrials sector, lifted by a confluence of geopolitical tailwinds that would have seemed improbable just a few years ago: European nations scrambling to rearm, the U.S. ramping Middle East air assets to levels not seen since the 2003 Iraq invasion, and a global order that increasingly demands the kind of hardware Lockheed builds. Full-year 2025 revenue hit $75.1 billion, up from $71.0 billion in 2024, with free cash flow of $6.9 billion funding both a $3.1 billion dividend commitment and $3.0 billion in share buybacks. The F-35 program — the largest weapons program in history — remains the crown jewel, and reports of Germany potentially doubling its F-35 order sent the stock surging this week. But at 30.7x trailing earnings, Lockheed trades at a premium that demands scrutiny. For investors weighing whether to buy into the global defense upcycle or take profits near all-time highs, the numbers tell a nuanced story.

Lockheed MartinLMT stock analysisdefense stocks