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The Pentagon is shifting toward a "wartime footing," driving major industrial-base changes: 10,000 new defense firms entered the market over two years and the Department awarded more than $120 billion in contracts to nontraditional companies in FY 2025.…
Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
The Pentagon is shifting toward a "wartime footing," driving major industrial-base changes: 10,000 new defense firms entered the market over two years and the Department awarded more than $120 billion in contracts to nontraditional companies in FY 2025.…
Read full report →Segment ImpactDeep dive into how this impacts each market segment.
The Pentagon's shift to a "wartime footing" will reshape demand across defense market segments: 10,000 new defense firms entering the market in two years, over $120 billion in contracts to nontraditional companies in FY 2025, a 330% increase in munitions obligations since FY 2010, and a budget…
Read full report →Action KitActionable checklists and implementation guidance.
The Pentagon’s move to operate on a “wartime footing” is driving a rapid expansion of the defense industrial base: thousands of new firms entered the market recently and the department funneled substantial contract dollars to nontraditional companies in FY 2025.…
Read full report →The Pentagon is shifting toward a "wartime footing," driving major industrial-base changes: 10,000 new defense firms entered the market over two years and the Department awarded more than $120 billion in contracts to nontraditional companies in FY 2025. Munitions contract obligations have increased 330% since FY 2010, and the Pentagon has executed historic multiyear procurement agreements while shifting budget share to low-cost munitions (49% in 2027, rising to 70% by 2031). An executive order titled "America First Arms Transfer Strategy" is being used to leverage Foreign Military Sales to expand domestic production capacity and resilience. This combination of expanded entrants, large FY 2025 spending to nontraditional firms, and explicit munitions prioritization materially changes competition, supply-chain demand, and compliance exposure for contractors. Immediate implications: procurement volumes for munitions and related subsystems will grow, new competitors will persist in the market, and contractors must prioritize DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement)/ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations)/EAR/CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification)/NIST 800-171 (NIST Special Publication 800-171) and domestic sourcing rules to capture or defend share.
Specific NAICS codes, agencies, contract vehicles, market segments, and compliance regimes are explicitly identified in the event segmentation and are affected:
A: The Summary reports over $120 billion in contracts to nontraditional companies in FY 2025 and 10,000 new defense firms entering the market in two years, indicating substantial near-term opportunity. Sustainability and follow-on opportunities are pending source review.
A: Munitions contract obligations have risen 330% since FY 2010; the Pentagon has signed multiyear procurement agreements and is shifting budget toward low-cost munitions (49% of munitions spend in 2027, rising to 70% by 2031). Specific solicitations, quantities, and award timelines are pending source review.
A: Segmentation names the DOD and uniformed-service acquisition organizations plus DLA, MDA, and DCMA, and lists IDIQ, GSA MAS, SeaPort-NxG, OASIS+, and ASTRO as relevant vehicles. Specific solicitations and vehicle-focused taskings are pending source review.
Who to notify: Capture Lead; BD Director; Proposal Manager; Manufacturing/Operations Lead; CTO/CISO; Compliance Officer; Finance Lead.
First 48-hour response playbook
Reference materials: Secure Operations Guide (/insights/secure-operations-guide); CMMC Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide); CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information)-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide)