Shipbuilding
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The Defense Trade Is Moving From Emergency Spending To Export Order Books
Japan’s export-rule overhaul, Korea’s European contracts, Leonardo’s land-systems expansion, and Rheinmetall’s new U.S. factory spending all point to the same shift: defense is becoming a production-capacity trade, not just a headline trade.
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The New Defense Trade Is Not Just Weapons. It Is Shipyard Capacity.
Traders are still chasing defense headlines, but the more durable signal may be in the yards. Washington is openly discussing allied shipbuilding with Korea and Japan, Seoul is tying its shipbuilding champions to both U.S. talks and Canada’s submarine tender, and Japan is trying to turn maritime revival into a real industrial comeback.
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Container Shipping Is Back on Traders’ Radar
Freight rates, shipyard scarcity, and U.S. maritime policy are turning liners and shipbuilders into a cross-market trade again.