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Defense and homeland security companies continued to outperform
the broader market in 2006 as the benchmark SPADE
Defense Index (AMEX: DXS) gained 19.33% and marked the seventh
consecutive year it has outperformed the S&P500. Defense
stocks are expected to continue to perform well in 2007, and
Merrill Lynch cited them among its top 10 picks for 2007. Since
2000, the Index has gained 113.86% compared with a (3.47%) loss
by the S&P 500. The Powershares Aerospace & Defense
Portfolio ETF (AMEX: PPA), which tracks the SPADE Defense Index,
saw its assets increase more than 80% to nearly $110 million.
Sixteen companies (of the 58 in the Index) posted gains in
excess of 30% and the 12 largest constituents all posted gains
of 10% or more with 10 of the 12 posting gains of 20%+. Returns
generated by the large-cap infrastructure prime contractors
were: Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) 44.70%; General Dynamics (NYSE:
GD) 30.38%; Raytheon (NYSE: RTN) 31.51%, Boeing (NYSE: BA) 26.48%,
and Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC) 12.63%. By te end of the year
the Index added SAIC (NYSE: SAI) and Stanley Inc. (NYSE: SXE),
bringing the number of constituents to 58.
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According to Scott
Sacknoff, manager of the SPADE Defense Index, performance gains
can be attributed to five factors:
1. Across-the-board increases in government spending,
2. Rising budgets for defense and homeland security,
3. Supplemental spending to cover the estimated $7 billion
monthly cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
4. An ongoing rebound in the commercial aircraft manufacturing
business, and
5. Continued expansion of the space and satellite market
2007 Outlook
With the Defense budget scheduled to grow by nearly $30 billion
in FY07 and supplemental spending forecast to add between $110
Billion and $170 Billion, CNBC cited defense as one of their
seven plays for 2007 and Merrill Lynch cited defense as one
of its top 10 picks. Investors Business Daily asked on 7 Dec
06, “...with global tensions high...where else would you
want to be?" and the Economic Times stated on 6 Dec 06,
"...Wall Street may be fretting that the U.S. economy is
slowing down, but the aerospace and defense industries are hard
pressed to figure out when their party will end." Overall,
the U.S. currently spends roughly 4.6% of GDP, the same percentage
on defense as it did in 1991 during the Gulf War.
The SPADE Defense Index is a modified cap-weighted index designed
to benchmark the performance of companies involved with defense,
homeland security, and space.
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