Global military spending in 2024 hit a record that will be broken in 2025. Much of the growth comes from the US (which just announced a goal of a $1 trillion defense budget) and its adversaries, but an important part is from US allies that feel they can no longer rely on US security guarantees. For that reason, they seek to build their own defense industrial bases rather than simply buy more American military products. There are opportunities for investors in this global proliferation of military production financed by government budgets, although the peculiarities of military industries make it more important than usual to have the right expertise. Defense-sector exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have, not surprisingly, boomed: the VanEck Defense UCITS Took in $1 billion in March 2025 alone.
In 2024 global military spending hit $2,718 billion, a 9.4% increase over 2023 and the steepest year-on-year rise since the end of the Cold War. The main drivers were the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza. Israel’s spending increased 65%, to $46.5 billion, which represented 8.78% of GDP, the second highest ratio after Ukraine — which spent nearly 35% of GDP on its military. Russia spent $149 billion, up 28% from 2023 and representing 7.1% of GDP and 19% of total government spending. German spending surged to $88.5 billion, the fourth largest total in the world after the US, China, and Russia, and just ahead of India at $86.1 billion.
All of these numbers are likely to grow in 2025 and into 2026, except perhaps in Ukraine, which might not be able to get above 35% of GDP. But the Ukraine example illustrates a different and more interesting dynamic. According to one report by a former Ukrainian official, Ukraine’s domestic defense sector has grown from $1 billion to $35 billion in just three years. It now produces about a third of Ukraine’s weapons and ammunition, and nearly all of its drones. That is not nearly enough to protect itself against the Russian army, but it is enough to ease some of the country’s dependence on the US
Similarly, Germany in particular, but also France and the European Union, have entered a new era in terms of domestic military production. Germany’s head of state, Friedrich Merz, won a parliamentary vote in March to not apply Germany’s “debt brake” policy to the defense sector. Merz also appealed to the EU to exempt defense production from its own spending rules. (EU member states have their own military budgets but the EU has rules on public debt.) Sixteen of the Union’s 27 members are seeking exemptions from the EU rules so they can increase their defense spending.
What is driving all this spending is principally the desire to, as Merz puts it, “achieve independence from the USA,” which under President Trump he sees as “largely indifferent to the fate of Europe.” EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, herself a former German defense minister, declared, “We are in an era of rearmament,” one that requires Europeans to construct their own defense as part of what France’s President Macron refers to as “strategic autonomy” from the US. The EU hopes that new bloc-wide procurement policies will strengthen European defense production at the cost of American materiel.
There is irony in the fact that European NATO members in recent years have spent more, not less, on weaponry produced in the US: from 52% of spending in 2015-19 to 64% in 2020-24. But that very dependence is why traditional US allies are so focused on independence from the US now that the US has abandoned its traditional approach to alliances. It is not just Europe. South Korea has been trying to replace US purchases with its own production for several years, including so that it might export weapons. Japan also seeks to increase domestic military industries. Israel is striving for self-sufficiency in bomb production. Even Australia has been trying to be more militarily independent, although in practice Australian defense production, current and projected, is commonly done jointly with US defense primes.
The proliferation of defense production in a globalized world can lead to curiosities, such as the battle between a Chinese state-controlled defense company and an Australian to buy a troubled Brazilian manufacturer. That in turn points to both the internationalization of military production and the question of what gets done with the products. US military industries and the US military itself have always advanced together. Foreign military sales were integrated into a much larger public-private strategy that was rooted in political alliances. The point was not to sell to enemies. The proliferation of military-industrial production in the past three years suggests a future in which weapons will be available from many sellers, including NATO members, with little or no reference to US policy guidance.
In short, the desire for autonomy from the US is driving a global surge in weapons production that will in turn lead to weapons proliferation on an unprecedented scale. Unless there is a significant increase in war, there will be an increase in excess production. Excess production will need to be off-loaded somewhere. This is the peculiarity of defense production. If you are not simply stockpiling — which is a dead weight on the economy — then you are proliferating. Weaponry ETFs in this scenario would have to be a short-term play. The longer-term returns will be in companies that aim not just at domestic production but at export.