BAE Systems Named in $992 Million U.S.-Israel Rocket Sale as Defense Demand Stays Strong

BAE Systems Named in $992 Million U.S.-Israel Rocket Sale as Defense Demand Stays Strong

May 14, 2026

London, May 14, 2026, 11:04 BST

BAE Systems plc landed the role of principal contractor for a proposed U.S. arms deal with Israel, covering 10,000 Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System-II rounds. The $992.4 million package appeared in a Federal Register notice on Thursday. Processed as a Foreign Military Sale, this U.S. government channel facilitates direct arms transfers between countries. According to the notice, APKWS-II features a laser-guidance system developed by BAE.

It’s all about timing. Governments continue snapping up missiles, air defence gear and other munitions at a clip that outpaces what most defence factories can churn out, and BAE has zeroed in on those segments for its expansion. Reuters noted last week that the Iran conflict is fueling steady demand for the UK’s largest defence contractor, which has seen its order backlog almost double since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

BAE, in a trading update filed May 7, reported what it called a “strong start to 2026” and reaffirmed guidance for the year. The company still expects sales to climb 7% to 9%, with underlying EBIT—operating profit before interest and tax, minus certain items—set to rise 9% to 11%. Free cash flow is forecast above 1.3 billion pounds.

The Israel notice doesn’t lock in a final contract yet. The filing showed $675.2 million in major defence gear, with another $317.2 million covering support, training, transport, and technical work. The main contractor sits in Nashua, New Hampshire—this points to BAE’s U.S. electronics and precision weapons division, not its UK shipyard or fighter jet operations.

BAE landed some niche technical work this week as well. According to a Pentagon contract notice dated May 13, BAE Systems Information & Electronic Systems Integration secured a $12.6 million cost-plus-fixed-fee deal aimed at developing an advanced sonar prototype. Under this structure, the government covers approved costs and tacks on a fixed fee. The project will merge BAE’s sonar tech with Sparton sonobuoy parts—those are the floating acoustic sensors designed for underwater listening.

BAE Systems GXP’s software division is heading the same way. On Thursday, BAE Systems GXP and Vantor announced they’ll deliver drone targeting and intelligence tools designed for environments where electronic warfare throws off GPS—think jamming, spoofing, unreliable location data. Kurt de Venecia, who leads product development at GXP, said the focus is providing analysts with “absolute targeting confidence.” Business Wire

Rivals are moving fast. On Wednesday, Reuters said the Pentagon set up framework deals with Anduril, CoAspire, Leidos, and Zone 5 for a low-cost containerized munitions program, eyeing the potential purchase of more than 10,000 missiles across a three-year stretch starting in 2027. The signal’s clear: buyers want scale—and not just from the usual prime contractors.

Traders in prediction markets aren’t betting on a quick diplomatic breakthrough in the Middle East. On Polymarket, chances of a U.S.-Iran nuclear deal happening by May 31 sit near 10%. A separate Polymarket contract on a permanent peace agreement by Dec. 31, though, is pegged much higher at 63%. Over at Kalshi, “Yes” contracts for a U.S.-Iran nuclear deal before 2027 are trading for about 36 cents—implying a 36% probability. These figures don’t directly forecast defense spending. Still, they help explain why investors keep watching the outlook for munitions demand. Polymarket

Risks remain in focus. Foreign Military Sales aren’t immune to setbacks—delays, revisions, or trimmed orders all happen, and even robust demand can’t erase execution pitfalls. Over in the UK, Babcock on Wednesday flagged a 140 million-pound hit tied to its Type 31 frigate contract, as unexpected rework costs piled up. It’s a pointed example: defence contracts can still sting contractors, especially when design changes, inflation, or tough fixed-price deals come into play.

For BAE, this goes beyond a single announcement. It’s the entire demand picture—guided rockets, sonar, drones, space systems, air defence—showing up together for investors. The real questions: how much of that turns into actual orders, and can the company execute cleanly?

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