Lockheed Martin (LMT) ended 2025 with a $194B backlog (up 6% YoY), $75.05B in annual sales (up 6%), and $6.9B in free cash flow (up 30.7%), while Venture Global (VG) posted $13.8B in full-year revenue (up 177%), $2.3B in net income (up 53%), and exported a record 1,409 TBtu of LNG (up 181%). Lockheed’s trailing P/E of 29 carries a 2.17% dividend yield, while Venture Global trades at a 18.01 P/E with a $40.7B market cap.

A potential military strike on Iranian infrastructure disrupting the Strait of Hormuz would trigger sustained orders for defense contractors’ precision munitions and aircraft while forcing global energy buyers to pivot to U.S. LNG supplies, directly benefiting both Lockheed Martin and Venture Global.

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With oil prices surging past $117 a barrel and the Strait of Hormuz in the crosshairs, President Trump issued a stark warning yesterday, vowing that without a deal by his Tuesday deadline, Iran would lose its power plants and bridges in a four-hour operation that sends the country back "to the Stone Ages.”

That’s a not-so-fancy way of saying there is significant potential chaos for 20% of global oil supply. Markets priced in the risk overnight -- crude jumped while broader indexes wobbled. Yet two sectors decoupled upward: aerospace and defense contractors that supply the hardware, and U.S. LNG exporters that fill the gap when Middle East energy routes falter. Two stocks look to be the clearest plays in what could be a tumultuous time: Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT) and Venture Global (NYSE:VG).

Lockheed Martin builds the tools of modern conflict -- F-35 jets, missiles, and radar systems that see heavy use in sustained airstrikes. A multi-week campaign against Iranian infrastructure would accelerate orders for precision munitions and aircraft replenishment, directly feeding the company’s record backlog.

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According to Lockheed Martin’s full-year 2025 financial results released in late January, the company ended the year with a $194 billion backlog, up 6% year-over-year. Total sales reached $75.05 billion for the trailing 12 months, a 6% increase from 2024, while free cash flow hit $6.9 billion -- up 30.7% from the prior year.

That cash machine funded $1.5 billion in shareholder returns in the first quarter of 2025 alone. The trailing P/E ratio sits at 29, higher than the five-year average of 25.7 but in line with defense peers facing similar demand. The forward annual dividend yield stands at 2.17%, with $13.50 per share expected, providing income while you wait for any escalation premium to materialize.

No matter how you slice it, LMT’s numbers show resilience. Quarterly revenue grew 9% year-over-year in the most recent period, outpacing the space division’s dip and underscoring aerospace strength. Compared to broader industrials, and Lockheed’s defense focus delivers steadier cash conversion -- $2.8 billion in free cash flow for Q4 versus more cyclical sectors. Smart investors note the pattern: similar threats earlier this year lifted shares 3% to 4% on announcement days, backed by the earnings data rather than hype.

Venture Global operates U.S. Gulf Coast LNG facilities that export American natural gas to Europe and Asia. Any prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz forces buyers to pivot hard to U.S. supplies, lifting both volumes and pricing.

Venture Global’s full-year 2025 results show revenue of $13.8 billion -- an eye-opening 177% jump from 2024. Net income reached $2.3 billion, up 53%, while consolidated adjusted EBITDA climbed 198% to $6.3 billion. The company exported a record 1,409 TBtu of LNG in 2025, up 181% year-over-year. Trailing P/E stands at 18.01 with EPS of $0.92 -- cheaper than many growth peers in energy infrastructure. The stock trades around a $40.7 billion market cap, with a modest forward dividend of $0.07 per share yielding 0.47%.

That shows VG's ability to turn geopolitical friction into cash flow. Q4 alone delivered $4.4 billion in revenue, up 193% year-over-year, with 478 TBtu sold. Guidance for full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA holds at $5.2 billion to $5.8 billion, unchanged despite market swings. Compared to integrated oil majors, VG’s pure-play LNG model delivers higher revenue growth -- 177% versus the mid-single digits typical for upstream peers -- while its low payout ratio leaves room for expansion.

Granted, escalation carries unknowns. A quick ceasefire could reverse oil gains and trim defense orders, as seen in past de-escalations. Prolonged conflict might spike inflation and fuel costs, pressuring the broader economy. Venture Global’s debt load -- its enterprise value sits around $78.7 billion -- bears monitoring if rates stay elevated. Lockheed’s P/E premium reflects expectations, not guarantees.

In short, if Trump’s deadline leads to sustained action, Lockheed Martin and Venture Global offer direct, data-backed exposure: Lockheed via its $194 billion backlog and 30.7% free-cash-flow growth, Venture Global via 177% revenue expansion and record LNG shipments.

Consider buying them on any post-rhetoric dip. These aren’t lottery tickets -- they’re companies with verifiable earnings engines that historically reward patience when geopolitics heats up. There will be extreme volatility, but the figures line up for savvy retail investors seeking opportunity amid the noise.

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