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Defense stocks soar; U.S. strike on Venezuela heralds ‘hard power’ era


Defense stocks in Europe and Asia surged on Monday as investors assessed how the dramatic overthrow of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro could herald a significant geopolitical shift that will boost the rearmament trade in the long run.

Rheinmetall, Germany’s largest arms manufacturer, gained over 7% in morning trade, while military technology and surveillance specialist Hensoldt rose 7.3%. Italy’s Leonardo added 6.3%, while German counterpart Renk added 6.9%.

Swedish fighter jet maker Saab was up 6.3%.

Earlier, Japan’s IHI Corp led Asian defense stocks’ gains, advancing almost 9%, followed closely by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which rose 8.4%. Kawasaki Heavy Industries, meanwhile, was up 7.9%. In South Korea, Hanwa Aerospace closed 7% higher, while shares in Poongsan gained 2.2%.

In the U.S., meanwhile, fighter jet giant Lockheed Martin notched 0.97% in pre-trade, while missile producer RTX was up 0.4%.

Fawaz Chaudhry, chief investment officer at Fulcrum Asset Management, said Maduro’s overthrow is a “signaling exercise” that will reshape geopolitics.

Fulcrum's Fawaz Chaudhry on the impact of Maduro overthrow on markets

“As President Trump invoked the Monroe Doctrine, he’s talking about the near sphere in America taking control through hard power, through hard power assets,” Chaudhry told CNBC’s “Europe Early Edition” on Monday.

“We’re talking about a world trying to shift to a new era, where we will basically [have] hard power military assets, and go and take control, which basically is a different policy from before.”

Chaudhry expects that this more assertive U.S. foreign policy approach will mean “more rearmament of Europe, rearmament of Asia,” in the longer term, adding that defense stocks and military spending will continue to rise.  

“What President Trump and what America just did in Venezuela will actually reinforce that. More military spending, more rearmament, of Europe, of Asia, so that trend will continue,” he explained.

New year, new world order

The gains made by European defense names mark a sharp reversal for the sector, which has struggled in recent weeks amid the prospect of a potential peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia.

Aoifinn Devitt, senior investment advisor at Moneta, expects defense spending to surge as a result of U.S. exceptionalism and the “gunboat diplomacy” theme on display in recent days.

“We know that the defense stocks did wobble when it looked like there might be peace in Ukraine. But ironically that theme, if anything, is going to be underscored especially [by] this rhetoric that is spreading things around to the neighboring countries,” Devitt told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday.

More broadly, defense has several key structural tailwinds behind it, Devitt said, highlighting a ramp-up in Germany’s military spending, which has been “endorsed wholeheartedly” by the current German administration.

“New year, new world order – I think we all have to accept that. That will drive precautionary spending on defense,” Devitt observed. “Do we think that’s a productive use of funds,…



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