ARLINGTON, Virginia, May 2, 2026, 14:08 EDT
RTX Corporation landed the role of principal contractor for two U.S.-approved arms deals in the Middle East, bringing the aerospace and defense giant back into the spotlight as the U.S. clears fresh missile defense sales for Qatar and Kuwait. The State Department greenlit over $8.6 billion in total sales to Qatar, Kuwait, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates. RTX and Lockheed Martin both appeared on the Qatar Patriot restock and Kuwait’s integrated battle-command system contracts. Northrop Grumman was also tapped for the Kuwait system, while BAE Systems featured on precision-weapon deals.
For RTX stock, timing’s key: missile-defense demand has shifted from a minor factor to a major driver of the company’s defense backlog. Last month, RTX reported Raytheon’s first-quarter sales climbed 10% to $6.95 billion, lifted by stronger volume in land and air defense—think Patriot, GEM-T, and also naval munitions.
Raytheon RTX landed a $441.6 million contract modification from the Army for Patriot GEM-T missiles, according to a U.S. government notice. The GEM-T, which stands for Guidance Enhanced Missile-Tactical, serves as a Patriot interceptor—built to take down incoming aircraft or missiles. The work is set for Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, with delivery slated for Sept. 30, 2026.
Patriot wasn’t the only program seeing movement. Earlier this week, Raytheon secured an $833 million Navy modification—covering Evolved SeaSparrow Missile Block 2 assemblies and containers—for the U.S. plus allied buyers: Australia, Canada, Germany, Norway, Spain, and Türkiye. The contract stretches through September 2030.
RTX Chairman and CEO Chris Calio, following the first-quarter report, pointed to “making significant investments to increase output,” with robust defense demand boosting the company’s expectations for 2026. RTX bumped up its adjusted sales guidance, now projecting $92.5 billion to $93.5 billion, and lifted its adjusted EPS view to a range of $6.70 to $6.90. RTX
The board bumped up RTX’s quarterly dividend by 7.4%, now at 73 cents a share—shareholders of record as of May 22 will see payment on June 11. It’s a modest move compared to the missile announcement, yet the company is managing to put cash back in investors’ hands even as it supports increased production.
There’s a caveat here. While the State Department approval is a step forward, it doesn’t spell out how much revenue RTX stands to gain—or when those contracts might actually materialize. Cost headwinds aren’t letting up either. Following its earnings, RTX’s management pointed out they’ve already paid $500 million in tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, legislation that allows for emergency trade actions. They’re considering seeking refunds.
RTX closed Friday at $173.99, slipping $2.08 on the day. Shares swung from $173.34 to $177.07 during the session. The company’s market cap sat around $234.3 billion.
Investors face a straightforward concern: just how fast approved air-defense deals and contract tweaks start hitting the top line, and whether production can ramp without slicing into profit. Right now, headlines tilt toward RTX’s Raytheon. Still, execution risk hasn’t gone anywhere.