Context
The U.S. has deployed the bulk of its AGM-158B JASSM-ER inventory to support operations related to Iran, leaving roughly 425 missiles from a prewar stockpile of approximately 2,300, according to reporting on April 4, 2026 (Fortune, Apr 4, 2026). That reduction places available global inventory at about 18% of pre-conflict levels, a shortfall of roughly 82% from prewar holdings. The JASSM-ER is a stealthy, long-range cruise missile that Lockheed Martin lists with an extended range (commonly cited near 925 km), giving it a strategic role distinct from subsonic legacy systems (Lockheed Martin fact sheet, 2024). The size and stealth characteristics of the JASSM-ER have made it a prioritized asset for precision deep-strike missions, and the current depletion materially alters the U.S. force posture for long-range precision fires.
These movements have immediate tactical implications and medium-term industrial consequences. On the tactical side, commanders face a narrower set of options for deep-strike missions requiring low-observability and long reach; that gap can influence target selection, sortie planning, and allied reliance on U.S. precision munitions. Industrially, the drawdown raises questions about production cadence, lead times for replenishment and potential prioritization of allocation among services and foreign partners. Strategically, the deployment signals the U.S. willingness to use high-end long-range munitions in regional contingencies, but it also exposes supply vulnerabilities of specialized ordnance designed and manufactured in constrained facilities.
Finally, the market and policy implications intersect. Defense equities tied to missile production and the broader avionics and guided-weapon ecosystem could see revenue downside coupled with upside from accelerated orders to rebuild stocks. The geopolitical risk premium for energy and risk-sensitive assets is likely to rise with continued escalation potential. Investors and policymakers should therefore re-evaluate assumptions about inventory depth, surge capacity and the time horizons for industrial mobilization in advanced munitions.
Data Deep Dive
The core figures reported on April 4, 2026 are stark: a prewar stockpile of roughly 2,300 JASSM-ER missiles and a remaining global availability of about 425 (Fortune, Apr 4, 2026). That equates to 425/2,300 = 18.5% remaining, and a consumption or allocation of approximately 1,875 missiles for the current operations. Put another way, the U.S. has moved nearly five times the remaining inventory out of theater relative to what is left for other contingencies. These arithmetic relationships underline the scale of the shift in ordnance posture.
For context, the JASSM-ER is distinguished by its low-observable shape and extended range (publicly cited near 925 km), compared with older cruise missiles such as the U.S. Navy Tomahawk (BGM-109) which the Navy lists with ranges in the vicinity of 1,600 km depending on variant and flight profile (Lockheed Martin; U.S. Navy fact sheets). While Tomahawk provides longer reach in some configurations, JASSM-ER’s survivability against air defenses makes it preferable for contested strikes from smaller, stealthier platforms such as the F-35 and upgraded F-15s. The reduction to ~425 deployable JASSM-ERs therefore affects the U.S. capacity to execute low-signature, land-attack precision strikes in multiple theaters simultaneously.
Production and procurement variables matter. Publicly available figures indicate incremental increases in production capacity in recent years, but lead times for complex munitions—encompassing avionics, warhead assembly, stealth shaping and specialized propulsion—are non-trivial. Replenishing thousands of units is not an overnight process; it involves contracting cycles, component supply chains, and facility throughput. The U.S. Department of Defense budget documentation and industry disclosures suggest that ramp rates can take multiple quarters to expand materially, and existing backlogs may push replenishment into 2027 and beyond absent emergency production surges (DoD and contractor filings, 2024–2025).
Sector Implications
Lockheed Martin (LMT) is the primary manufacturer of the JASSM family, which makes its revenue outlook and order backlog central to the sector narrative. Rapid consumption of inventory typically leads to immediate order flow, but there is an execution lag between contract awards and delivery. For equities, that creates a two-phase effect: initial operational stress can pressure short-term sentiment, while longer-term revenue visibility improves as replenishment contracts are issued. Peer suppliers in avionics, propulsion components and specialized composite structures (smaller sub-contractors) will see corresponding order surges, amplifying the sector-wide industrial cadence.
Beyond Lockheed, defense prime contractors such as RTX and Northrop Grumman (NOC) play roles in complementary systems—sensors, seekers and integration with delivery platforms—so they are indirectly affected by shifts in mission demand. For instance, platform-level modifications to integrate alternative long-range munitions can shift procurement priorities among primes and sub-primes. The market may re-price the expected backlog for LMT and its suppliers, but the timetable for revenue recognition could lag by multiple quarters, creating potential volatility.
On the allied front, U.S. partners that rely on American stocks for high-end strike capability face two choices: accept fewer transfers or pursue alternative procurement paths. European and Indo-Pacific partners have been expanding their own precision-strike inventories, but their production capacities for JASSM-class weapons are limited. This dynamic could accelerate cooperative procurement dialogues or stress-sharing arrangements under collective defense frameworks. Institutional investors should review exposure to contractors with flexible production bases and to suppliers able to scale rapidly, as they are likelier to capture incremental contract wins.
Risk Assessment
Operationally, reduced JASSM-ER availability increases mission risk in contested environments. Commanders might substitute less-stealthy platforms or munitions, potentially raising attrition risk and collateral considerations. Politically, visible depletion of high-value assets can influence alliance bargaining—partners may demand reassurance through other means (force posture, intelligence sharing, kinetic alternatives) or seek compensatory capabilities. The risk to regional stability is non-linear: a single escalatory incident could trigger further use of scarce precision munitions and accelerate depletion curves.
Industrial risks include supplier single points of failure. The JASSM-ER relies on specialized components—low-observable coatings, precision seekers and propulsion systems—that have concentrated manufacturing footprints. Any disruption (labor, quality, or geopolitical restrictions on materials) could constrain ramp-up. Financially, contractors face execution risk: meeting surge orders under compressed timelines can pressure margins if overtime, supply premiums and capacity expansion costs are significant. Investors should weigh order book growth against potential near-term margin compression and working-capital demands.
Market risks extend to macro assets. Higher perceived regional conflict risk historically lifts defense equities but can also provoke flight-to-safety flows that pressure cyclical exposure. Energy markets may react if the situation threatens shipping lanes or regional supplies; in the short-term, volatility in oil benchmarks and safe-haven assets (e.g., Treasury yields) can be expected. These cross-asset linkages amplify the market impact beyond single-stock moves and underscore the broader economic consequences of ordnance consumption at scale.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital judges the immediate headlines — a drawdown to ~425 JASSM-ERs from 2,300 — as a material signal of constrained high-end strike inventories, but not an irreversible strategic deficiency. Our contrarian view is that the market may overestimate the duration of scarcity while underestimating substitution and acceleration mechanisms. Historically, U.S. defense industrial policy has allowed for emergency capacity expansion (for example, post-9/11 ordnance ramp-ups and the accelerated munitions production programs in 2022–2023). If Congress and the DoD elect to prioritize replenishment, we expect a meaningful reallocation of budgets and expedited contractor awards within 60–180 days, translating into a visible uptick in procurement-related backlog for key primes.
Second, the operational gap created by JASSM-ER depletion can be mitigated by a mix of alternatives: re-tasking less survivable munitions with stand-off delivery profiles, flight-path adaptations to reduce exposure, and greater use of persistent ISR to improve targeting efficiency. These operational mitigants blunt some of the strategic edges lost with lower JASSM-ER inventories. Investors should therefore focus on firms with flexible product portfolios and on suppliers that can ramp critical components quickly, rather than assuming uniform benefit across all defense names. For more on industrial mobilization dynamics and supplier selection, see our research on [defense supply chain resilience](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Finally, we flag a policy risk: prioritization may favor replenishment for U.S. stocks over allied replenishment, imposing geopolitical friction. That could produce secondary market opportunities for non-U.S. defense suppliers and for European primes if allied nations seek rapid sovereign alternatives. Read our longer note on geopolitical supply-chain implications here: [Fazen Capital insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
Looking forward, expect a two-stage market and policy reaction. In the near term (weeks to a few months), volatility in defense-related equities is likely as investors re-price the probability of accelerated orders and weigh execution risk. Anecdotal evidence from contractor statements and DoD procurement intent over the subsequent 30–90 days will be critical; formal contract awards will be the clearest signal that replenishment is underway. Monitor procurement notices and Lockheed Martin commentary for explicit ramp-rate guidance.
Over the medium term (three to twelve months), if the DoD initiates a production surge, revenue recognition and backlogs at primary contractors should improve, but margin pressure is possible due to overtime and supply premiums. Conversely, if replenishment is slow or constrained by supply-chain bottlenecks, scarcity could persist into 2027 and beyond, elevating strategic risk and potentially shifting platform usage patterns. For investors, opportunities will favor contractors with modular production capacity, diversified supplier bases, and prior experience executing surge programs.
Policy decisions will also matter for allied relations. The U.S. may choose to prioritize theater needs over transfers, which could push partners to accelerate indigenous programs or procure alternative systems. That rebalancing would have wider industrial implications across NATO and Indo-Pacific defense ecosystems.
FAQ
Q: How quickly can JASSM-ER stocks realistically be replenished?
A: Historical precedent suggests meaningful capacity increases can occur within quarters when Congress and the Pentagon prioritize funding, but full-scale replenishment of thousands of missiles likely spans multiple quarters to years due to component lead times and facility throughput. Key indicators to watch are formal contract awards, increases in supplier order books, and explicit production-rate guidance from Lockheed Martin and the DoD.
Q: Does this depletion change U.S. deterrence posture globally?
A: It narrows the margin for simultaneous high-end operations because a smaller pool of stealthy long-range munitions is available for contingencies outside the current theater. However, the U.S. still retains other long-range strike options (e.g., Tomahawk, standoff munitions) and non-kinetic tools. Deterrence is therefore altered in degree rather than wholly removed, with the caveat that sustained consumption without replenishment would progressively erode options.
Bottom Line
The reported reduction of JASSM-ER stocks to about 425 from 2,300 is a material shift that compresses U.S. high-end strike capacity and forces near-term operational trade-offs, while creating visible demand for industrial ramp-up and potential volatility in defense equities. Monitoring procurement awards and production-rate signals will be decisive for assessing the duration and market consequences of this depletion.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
