WASHINGTON, DC: Although the worst year the stock market has seen
since the 1930s, aerospace and defense companies continued to
outperform the broader markets, with the benchmark SPADE Defense Index
(NYSE Alternext US: DXS) outperforming the S&P500 for the ninth
consecutive year, a Marketwire press release said.
An 8.21% surge in December saw the sector, which trailed the market
most of the year, end on a positive note. Although the index finished
2008 down 38.03%, the worst it has recorded since launching in 1997,
December's gain enabled the Index to finish ahead of the S&P500 by 46
basis points and overcome a year that saw the Index trade downward due
to pressure from the market, a strike at Boeing which impacted a
number of firms, and the uncertainty associated with a presidential
election. Three-, five-, and ten-year performance is significantly ahead of the
broader markets, producing gains of [9.66%], 14.60%, and 86.69%,
respectively. The Powershares Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSE: PPA),
which seeks to replicate the performance of the SPADE Defense Index,
continues to attract investors interested in adding defense companies
to their core portfolio. According to Scott Sacknoff, President of SPADE Indexes, "Investors
should not forget that companies involved with defense, homeland
security, aerospace, and government space activities generate nearly
5% of U.S. GDP. With the government as a primary customer, they are
less likely to be directly affected long-term by economic factors
associated with the banking crisis, recession, and inflation.
Additionally, the sector remains a major source of manufacturing jobs
in the United States and should benefit from the 2009 infrastructure
initiatives. Healthy balance sheets and a number of trends suggesting
growth can continue. Notably:. 1. The mission to protect and defend the U.S. and its citizens remains a critical goal of government. 2. Support for defense and security initiatives inside the Obama administration is strong. 3. A tremendous need to recapitalize equipment used in Iraq and modernize defense equipment and systems exists. Continued expansion in related business lines such as cybersecurity and the delivery of commercial aircraft. Mr. Sacknoff concluded stating that, "While the sector may move in sympathy with the overall market at times, the underlying factors driving the defense industry remain quite different. As investors return their focus to fundamentals, defense companies should benefit."