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SHLD vs. PPA: Which Defense ETF Wins the Global Rearmament Trade?

SHLD vs. PPA: Which Defense ETF Wins the Global Rearmament Trade?

David BerenTue, June 16, 2026 at 1:49 PM UTC

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Quick Read -

PPA outpaces SHLD with a 29% one-year return versus 12%, backed by a decade-long track record showing 405% cumulative gains.

The FY2027 Department of War budget request of $1,450 billion, up $441 billion from FY2026, directly aligns with PPA's US prime and aerospace holdings.

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Defense ETFs have multiplied as the global rearmament cycle has matured, and two of the most-followed products take very different routes to the same theme. The Global X Defense Tech ETF (NASDAQ:SHLD) and the Invesco Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSEARCA:PPA) both promise exposure to rising military budgets, but they define the trade in incompatible ways. One is built around international defense champions and emerging defense tech. The other leans on US primes and commercial aerospace. The gap between the two has been material.

Andrew Angelov / Shutterstock.comWhat Each Fund Is Actually Betting On

SHLD's portfolio remains the more unconventional of the pair. As of June 12, 2026, its top weights are held in General Dynamics at 8.54%, RTX at 8.45%, Lockheed Martin at 8.23%, Northrop Grumman at 8.08%, and Palantir at 7.62%. Nearly a third of the fund is allocated to European defense names: Rheinmetall at 4.50%, BAE Systems at 4.39%, Leonardo at 3.75%, and Thales at 3.67%.

SHLD layers in smaller positions across the drone, autonomy, and ISR ecosystem, including AeroVironment, Kratos, BigBear.ai, BlackSky, Red Cat, and DroneShield. The implicit bet is that allied rearmament outside the US and emerging categories such as drones, satellite imagery, and battlefield AI will outpace the legacy primes, a view shaped by defense‑tech dispersion and NATO rearmament trends.

PPA takes the older approach. Built around the SPADE Defense Index, it focuses on US-listed aerospace and defense names and adds commercial aerospace exposure via Boeing, GE Aerospace, and RTX Corporation. Its bet is simpler: a rising US defense budget, paired with a commercial aircraft cycle, lifts a familiar set of primes. The FY 2027 Department of War request of $1,450 billion, up $440.9 billion from the FY 2026 enacted level, aligns directly with PPA's holdings, including $52.9 billion for critical munitions and $59.7 billion for space procurement and RDT&E.

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Where the Difference Has Shown Up

Recent performance favors the US-heavy book. PPA is up 28.72% over the past year and 11.2% year to date, while SHLD has delivered 12.10% over one year and is down 1.5% year to date. Over five years, PPA is up 132.71%, with a 10-year gain of 405%. SHLD, which began trading in September 2023, has returned 162% since inception. PPA also held up during the 2022 rate shock, gaining 8.8% in 2022 while broad equity indexes fell, a track record SHLD cannot yet match.

The Practical Comparison

Factor

Issuer

Global X

Invesco

Strategy tilt

Global primes + defense tech

US primes + commercial aerospace

Expense ratio

0.49%

Not disclosed in source

Net assets

$7.53 billion

Not disclosed in source

1-year return

12.10%

28.72%

YTD 2026 return

-1.5%

11.2%

2022 return

Pre-inception

8.8%

SHLD's foreign holdings carry currency risk and are subject to different dividend tax treatment. PPA's commercial aerospace sleeve adds cyclical exposure that pure defense buyers may not want.

The Verdict

PPA fits an investor seeking concentrated exposure to the US defense budget cycle and the Boeing-led commercial aerospace recovery, with a 10-plus year track record and recent leadership. SHLD fits an investor convinced that European rearmament, Asian primes, and emerging categories like drones, space, and battlefield AI will drive the next leg, who is willing to accept a younger fund, more international exposure, and a Palantir-sized single-stock bet. A sharper Pentagon focus on critical munitions and space, combined with a Boeing stall, would tilt the calculus back toward SHLD.

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Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Money”

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