Time to Consider Defense Stocks Amid Rising Military Spending?

 | Apr 10, 2024 00:10

NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, commemorated its 75th anniversary last week, at a time when the 32-member alliance finds itself in an increasingly precarious position. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s warning that Europe has entered a “pre-war era” underscores the geopolitical challenges going forward and the need to shore up defenses.

Like it or not, the world is confronting a new age of warfare, marked by escalating conflicts (including those involving non-state actors like Hamas and the Houthis), China’s growing influence and the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) in military applications. Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine has heightened concerns about spillover violence, raising questions about NATO’s long-term military support for Kyiv.

Since the alliance’s founding in 1949, the absolute number of armed conflicts globally, as well as the number of war-related deaths, has significantly declined.

This alarming rise in violence has led to a significant surge in defense spending among NATO allies, with as many as 18 member nations expected to allocate at least 2% of their GDP to defense this year, up from just three countries in 2014, according to the group.

h2 Europe Doubling Its Military Imports as Tensions Mount/h2

The changing nature of warfare goes beyond conventional nation-state conflicts, with non-state actors increasingly involved in armed conflicts. The rapid development of AI and machine learning—used in autonomous weapons such as Ukraine’s Saker Scout drone—is also raising concerns about their potential use in cyber, physical and biological attacks.

SIPRI, or the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, reports that European states have nearly doubled their imports of major arms between 2019 and 2023, but the surge is not limited to Europe. The U.S.—which already outspends the next 10 countries combined on national defense—is closely monitoring China’s military modernization efforts. Beijing plans to boost its defense budget by 7.2% this year, focusing on developing advanced technologies such as hypersonic missiles and AI.