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European defence stocks soar as arms makers expect orders boom

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  bob-nelson  •  yesterday  •  7 comments

By:   jjpjolly (the Guardian)

European defence stocks soar as arms makers expect orders boom



Big rises for BAE, Rheinmetall, Thales and Leonardo amid European push to support possible Ukraine peace deal


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We knew Donald would be good for business... but we didn't know he'd be far better for foreign business.

There are links in the seed.



S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


1280 Share prices in European weapons companies have soared as investors anticipated significantly higher spending
after the UK and France led an effort to form a peace deal for Ukraine.

Britain's BAE Systems rose by 15% on Monday, Germany's Rheinmetall gained 14%, France's Thales increased 16% and Italy's Leonardo was also up 16%. In London the surge in defence related shares helped to push the FTSE 100 to a new record high. It closed up 0.7% at 8871.31.

The moves continued a steep rally in defence stocks as investors expected big increases in defence budgets by European countries, stoked by fears that Washington would withdraw security guarantees.

Donald Trump has shocked longtime allies around the world by claiming that Ukraine is not "ready for peace", three years after Russia launched a full-scale invasion. He has threatened to withdraw US support for the country after a public meeting with the Ukrainian leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, descended into acrimony.

The UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, said on Sunday Europe was "at a crossroads in history" as he hosted a summit in London with Zelenskyy and 18 other leaders, including France's president, Emmanuel Macron, to try to form a peace deal to support Ukraine.

Defence bosses in Europe have long argued that weapons spending should be higher, and the prospect of the US removing its support has made politicians pay attention.

A line graph showing the changes in share price of five leading European defence firms

Shares in aerospace companies with significant defence revenues also rose on Monday. Airbus, the European passenger jet maker, rose by 5%, France's Safran gained 3%, while the rally added to Rolls-Royce's momentum after the British jet-engine manufacturer sent investors into raptures last week with strong results. Its shares gained 4% on Monday, hitting a record high.

The British defence technology company QinetiQ rose by 12%, while France's Dassault Aviation gained 15%.

BAE, Britain's biggest weapons maker, reported record orders last month as its annual profits topped £3bn for the first time in 2024. Its stock has more than doubled since the start of the war and the company is valued at £48bn.

Holger Schmieding, an economist at Berenberg investment bank, said: "Europe and Germany in particular must - and very likely will - raise defence spending for themselves as well as for Ukraine well beyond recent plans. The UK and Norway have already pledged additional support for Ukraine. Germany will probably do so shortly."

Starmer announced last week that the UK would raise its spending on defence to the equivalent of 2.5% of GDP by 2027, three years earlier than planned and up from 2.3%. The increase in weapons spending will be funded through a deeply controversial cut in international aid spending.

Macron called on Europeans to increase annual defence spending to more than 3% of GDP to counter the threat from Russia. Germany's likely new chancellor, Friedrich Merz, is also in talks to push through higher defence spending.

Analysts at JPMorgan said the events of the past two weeks had "turbocharged" their thesis of a European rearmament cycle, with leaders seeking to make more of their military equipment and import less from the US.

"There are 30 European countries in Nato and we expect many of them will soon commit to much higher defence spending," they said in a note, Reuters reported.


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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    yesterday

What are our Aussie members thinking about AUKUS these days? The President of the United States did not know what "AUKUS" means, when asked by a reporter.

So now Australia is buying pointless, crazy-expensive strategic nuclear missile-launching subs from the US ( jrSmiley_86_smiley_image.gif ) instead of reasonable, reasonably-priced conventional attack subs from France.

Good luck!!

 
 
 
shona1
Professor Quiet
1.1  shona1  replied to  Bob Nelson @1    21 hours ago

Morning... don't know and don't really care..

We have elections coming up May 3 could be a change of government so could be all up the creek anyway...

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1.1.1  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  shona1 @1.1    20 hours ago

Do you think you can count on the US to go to war to defend Australia?

 
 
 
shona1
Professor Quiet
1.1.2  shona1  replied to  Bob Nelson @1.1.1    17 hours ago

Nope why would we??

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1.1.3  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  shona1 @1.1.2    16 hours ago

That's why countries sign alliance treaties.

 
 
 
shona1
Professor Quiet
1.1.4  shona1  replied to  Bob Nelson @1.1.3    15 hours ago

They may sign them but when push comes to shove they don't mean a thing...

 
 
 
Thomas
PhD Guide
2  Thomas    yesterday

I bet the American defense contractors love it, also... /s

 
 

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