Directing the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution, to remove the United States Armed Forces from hostilities against the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Summary
H.Con.Res.75 — a non-binding resolution directing withdrawal from Iran hostilities — signals serious legislative momentum after unanimous consent on April 27. Despite carrying $0 in funding, the resolution threatens an estimated $1-5B in deferred defense replenishment for LMT, NOC, and RTX, while removing a $3-5/bbl geopolitical risk premium from crude markets that weighs on XOM and CVX. Defense stocks have already repriced materially lower over 30 days (LMT -15.56%, NOC -15.68%, RTX -9.36%) reflecting this risk. Energy majors are marginally positive on the week but down materially on the month.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.H.Con.Res.75 has $0 funding but threatens $1-5B in deferred defense replenishment revenue via signal of de-escalation from Iran hostilities.
- 2.Defense primes LMT, NOC, RTX have already re-priced -9% to -16% over 30 days; the April 27 unanimous consent agreement accelerates legislative risk.
- 3.Removal of the $3-5/bbl Iran war risk premium from crude markets is a headwind for XOM and CVX upstream margins; the DPA production memo is a partial offset.
- 4.Non-binding resolution — passage would be politically significant but legally non-enforceable; market impact depends on actual administration response, not just legislative action.
Market Implications
Defense sector near-term outlook is bearish for consumable munitions primes. LMT at $510.35 trades near the bottom of its 52-week range ($410.11-$692) with no catalyst to reverse unless hostilities escalate. NOC at $575.29 shows similar exhaustion. RTX at $174.84 has less downside potential given commercial aerospace diversification (Collins, Pratt & Whitney), but missile segment revenue remains at risk. GD at $340.55 (+8.73% over 7 days) diverged sharply on Apr 29-30, possibly reflecting a defensive rotation into less conflict-exposed defense names with longer-cycle shipbuilding and land systems backlogs. Energy sector: XOM and CVX are structurally vulnerable to a $3-5/bbl premium removal. The DPA production memo supports long-term domestic production growth but does not prevent near-term crude price compression. Energy names are marginally positive on the week but down materially on the month — consistent with the view that the Iran premium has been partially but not fully priced out. If the resolution passes the House, expect further crude downside of $2-4/bbl as the political path to ceasefire becomes more credible.
Full Analysis
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
Non-binding concurrent resolution directing the President to remove U.S. Armed Forces from hostilities against Iran within 30 days, per War Powers Resolution section 5(c). This resolution carries zero funding but signals legislative momentum to de-escalate a conflict that began on Feb 28, 2026.
Who must act
President of the United States (executive branch) — the resolution is non-binding but creates political pressure to withdraw forces.
What happens
De-escalation or withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iran hostilities would halt or reduce the rate of munitions expenditure (missiles, bombs, precision-guided munitions) and platform attrition (aircraft, drones, naval vessels), leading to deferred or canceled replenishment contracts valued at an estimated $1-5B annually for prime defense contractors.
Stock impact
Lockheed Martin's Missiles and Fire Control and Aeronautics segments — which produce precision munitions (JASSM, Hellfire, GMLRS) and the F-35 — are direct beneficiaries of active conflict inventory drawdown. Reduced combat tempo delays follow-on production orders and spares. The stock has already priced this risk: -15.56% over 30 days to $510.35, near the low end of its 52-week range of $410.11-$692.
What the bill does
Same resolution as above — directs removal from Iran hostilities, reducing munitions consumption and platform replacement urgency.
Who must act
President of the United States (executive branch) — non-binding but politically significant.
What happens
Reduced combat operations lower the burn rate for advanced munitions (e.g., AARGM, AMRAAM, Sidewinder) and decrease the probability of accelerated B-21 or GBSD (Sentinel) deployment due to strategic urgency. Estimated deferred defense revenue across the sector of $1-5B.
Stock impact
Northrop Grumman's Defense Systems and Space Systems segments produce long-range strike and missile defense systems that see accelerated procurement during active hostilities. Reduced conflict risk lowers the urgency for these programs. Stock down -15.68% over 30 days to $575.29, reflecting the market's perception of this legislative risk.
Market Impact Score
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Directing the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution, to remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities with Iran.
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.
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.
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.
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