No Stock Buybacks for Defense Until Warfighters Win
Published Date: 1/13/2026
Presidential Document
Summary
The government is making sure defense companies put our soldiers first by stopping them from paying dividends or buying back stock until they deliver top-quality gear on time and on budget. This affects all defense contractors starting right now, pushing them to boost production and innovation. The goal? Faster, better military equipment to keep America safe without wasting money.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 5 costs, 0 mixed.
Immediate ban on dividends and buybacks
Effective immediately, defense contractors are not permitted to pay dividends or buy back stock “until such time as they are able to produce a superior product, on time and on budget.” This prohibition applies to defense contractors identified by the Government and begins on January 7, 2026.
30-day review and 15-day remediation window
Within 30 days of the order, the Secretary must identify defense contractors that are underperforming, not investing enough, or not prioritizing U.S. contracts. Identified contractors will receive notice and have a 15-day period to submit a board-approved remediation plan for the Secretary's review.
Secretary can use enforcement tools including DPA
If a contractor's remediation plan is insufficient or dispute isn't resolved in the 15-day window, the Secretary may immediately pursue remedies to expedite production. Remedies may include voluntary agreements, enforcement under the Defense Production Act (50 U.S.C. 4501 et seq.), and contract enforcement under the Federal Acquisition Regulations and Defense Federal Acquisition Regulations Supplement.
Future contracts to bar buybacks and tie pay to delivery
Within 60 days, the Secretary will ensure future contracts include provisions prohibiting stock buy-backs and corporate distributions during periods of underperformance, require executive incentive pay be tied to on-time delivery and increased production (not short-term metrics like free cash flow or EPS), and allow executive base salaries to be capped at current levels with inflationary increases only, consistent with law.
Limits on advocacy and SEC buyback safe harbor review
The Secretary, in consultation with State and Commerce, may cease advocacy or deny new advocacy for underperforming contractors competing for Foreign Military or Direct Commercial Sales. The SEC Chairman is asked to consider amending Rule 10b-18 to prohibit use of the buy-back safe harbor for defense contractors identified under this order.
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