A joint resolution to direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities within or against the Islamic Republic of Iran that have not been authorized by Congress.
Summary
S.J. Res. 116, which would have directed removal of U.S. forces from unauthorized hostilities against Iran, was rejected by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on March 24, 2026, by a 47-53 vote. This action maintains the existing military status quo and removes no tail risks or headwinds for defense or energy equities. The broader market declines in LMT (-15.8% 30-day), NOC (-15.64%), and XOM (-9.34%) are driven by factors unrelated to this specific procedural vote.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.S.J. Res. 116 was rejected 47-53 by committee; status quo military posture toward Iran maintained.
- 2.No new defense spending authorized or constrained; this was a procedural vote on troop withdrawal directive.
- 3.Defense stock declines (LMT -15.8%, NOC -15.64% over 30 days) are from broader market factors, not this resolution.
- 4.Energy sector (XOM -9.34%, CVX -7.39% over 30 days) sees no change in geopolitical risk calculus from this vote.
- 5.Multiple similar resolutions remain pending in committee; low probability of near-term passage given vote margins.
Market Implications
This vote is a non-event for defense and energy equities. The 47-53 margin shows the Senate is not inclined to force a withdrawal from Iran operations, removing a potential downside tail risk for defense contractors. However, the absence of new authorization also means no upside catalyst. LMT at $508.87, NOC at $575.54, and GD at $341.92 are being priced on earnings outlooks and budget negotiations, not on this resolution. GD's +9.17% 7-day bounce is idiosyncratic (likely earnings or company-specific news) and not tied to this legislative outcome. For energy, XOM at $153.82 and CVX at $191.60 have recovered ~3-3.5% over 7 days as oil prices stabilized, but this rally is from macro oil demand sentiment, not from any change in Iran hostilities risk. Investors should not attribute any market moves to this procedural committee vote.
Full Analysis
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee rejected S.J. Res. 116 on March 24, 2026, voting 47-53 against discharging the resolution to the full Senate. This joint resolution would have directed the President to remove U.S. Armed Forces from hostilities within or against Iran unless Congress enacted a declaration of war or specific authorization. The rejection means the existing U.S. military posture—Operation Epic Fury, initiated February 28, 2026—continues under current executive authority. This is purely a procedural outcome; no new funding, authorization, or constraint on military operations was enacted. The resolution did not authorize or appropriate any dollars; it sought to restrict existing operations. The affected sectors—Defense and Energy—remain on their pre-vote trajectory. For defense primes (LMT, NOC, GD, RTX), this vote removes no tail risk of a forced withdrawal that could have disrupted procurement timelines. For energy majors (XOM, CVX), the rejection means no change to the geopolitical risk premium embedded in oil prices from ongoing U.S.-Iran hostilities. Neither sector receives a structural catalyst from this vote. Real market data shows sharp declines across defense: LMT fell 15.8% over 30 days to $508.87, NOC fell 15.64% to $575.54, RTX fell 9.59% to $174.42, while GD recovered +9.17% in 7 days to $341.92. These moves are driven by broader macro headwinds (interest rates, budget uncertainty) rather than this legislative event. The timeline for any similar resolution would require reintroduction and new committee action; multiple related bills (SJRES104, 114, 115, 117, 163) remain in committee with similar status.
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity
What the bill does
Rejection of resolution preserves existing U.S. military posture toward Iran; no new constraints on operations
Who must act
U.S. Department of Defense under existing AUMF/presidential authority
What happens
Continued procurement and sustainment of munitions, aircraft, and missile defense systems at current operational tempo
Stock impact
Lockheed's F-35 and missile defense programs (THAAD, PAC-3) are funded under baseline procurement; no incremental authorization change
What the bill does
Maintained authorization for ongoing operations sustains demand for long-range strike and strategic systems
Who must act
U.S. Central Command and Air Force procurement budget
What happens
Continued orders for B-21, GBSD, and electronic warfare systems at current programmed levels
Stock impact
Northrop's B-21 low-rate production and GBSD development continue under existing contracts; no new authorization or disruption
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
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