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Defense Spending Booms -- Underwater and in Britain

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It's been a rough couple of weeks for U.S. defense contractors, in the military shipbuilding space in particular.

On Jan. 29, General Dynamics (NYSE: GD) beat earnings forecasts (which had been recently lowered) with some help from its Gulfstream aircraft division, but disappointed investors by reporting weak margins in in its marine systems segment (General Dynamics' biggest division by revenue, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence).

One week later, it was Huntington Ingalls Industries' (NYSE: HII) turn to disappoint. A specialist in military shipbuilding, HII reported that both its sales and its earnings were less than Wall Street had hoped for. And operating profits at both the company's shipbuilding units (Ingalls and Newport News) declined year over year.

For the past several months, I've been warning that all is not well with U.S. defense stocks. Still, with the U.S. Navy supposedly gearing up to deter Chinese aggression against Taiwan and the Philippines, and the military in general winning sizable support to build up to deter Russian aggression in Ukraine, investors may have been surprised to see this kind of weakness at America's naval shipbuilders. And it got me to wondering: Might they be surprised enough to consider investing in some foreign defense stocks instead?

The United Kingdom seen from space.
Image source: Getty Images.

Britannia rules (under) the waves

Around the same time General Dynamics and HII were disappointing investors here in the U.S., a couple of news items surfaced that piqued my interest in defense contractors on the other side of the ocean -- the United Kingdom's Rolls-Royce (OTC: RYCEY) and BAE Systems (OTC: BAES.Y) in particular.

In January, for example, analysts at new defense-market publication Ignition highlighted a new $11.3 billion contract awarded by the U.K.'s government to Rolls-Royce, to build nuclear power systems for the Royal Navy's submarine fleet.

The contract covers support for the RN's current fleet of four Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines, also known as SSBNs, each of which carries Trident II D5 missiles from Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT), and each of which is powered by a Rolls-Royce PWR2 nuclear reactor. The contract also encompasses the production of upgraded PWR3 nuclear reactors for the country's upcoming fleet of three (or perhaps four) new Dreadnought-class SSBNs.

And here's the thing that may really astound you: The U.K. is projecting that building the Dreadnoughts will cost $38.8 billion in total. That means that Rolls-Royce's part of this project may amount to as much as 29% of all funds that will be spent on the upgrade.