
India’s defence sector just got a global boost. The Nifty India Defence index gained 1% on June 26, riding the wave of NATO’s historic decision to increase military spending.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation agreed to hike defence budgets to 5% of GDP by 2035, up from the current 2%. This comes after strong pressure from former U.S. President Donald Trump and marks a major shift in global security dynamics.

This global military upgrade is great news for Indian defence stocks. Shares of Hindustan Aeronautics (HAL) and Bharat Electronics (BEL) saw fresh buying interest, both gaining up to 1% in early trade. Other key players like Garden Reach Shipbuilders, Bharat Dynamics, and DCX Systems also surged, helping the Nifty India Defence index continue its upward march.
Make in India Just Went Global
The real story, though, is India’s growing clout as a global defence exporter.
From ₹1,500 crore in FY2016 to ₹21,100 crore in 2023-24 — that’s a 13x jump in exports. In the same period, the private sector’s share went from just 13% to 62%. According to InCred Equities, India is targeting ₹5 lakh crore in defence exports by 2028-29. That’s massive.
What’s driving this growth? Missiles, radar systems, armoured vehicles — all built in India and sold to 85+ countries. Top buyers include the US, France, and Armenia. This isn’t just screw-driver tech. We’re exporting niche, high-value defence equipment — and that’s a big deal.
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From Importer to Exporter?
India is still the world’s largest arms importer, with 9.8% of global imports. But the tide is turning. With initiatives like ‘Make in India’, indigenous manufacturing is ramping up. The share of domestic procurement has already hit 75%.
Despite India contributing just 0.2% to global defence exports as of 2024, the potential is huge. The global market is dominated by the US (43%) and France (9.6%). There’s a massive gap India can fill — especially with rising global defence needs.
What This Means for Investors
For retail investors watching the Nifty India Defence index, this is a clear signal: the defence sector is no longer just about national security — it’s becoming a growth story. With government support, increasing private participation, and global tailwinds, Indian defence stocks could keep climbing.
And with NATO pouring billions more into military upgrades, demand for Indian-made systems could explode.
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