Almost two-thirds of fund managers permit some level of “nuclear exposure,” with 34% allowing investments in nuclear weaponry, according to Jefferies Financial Group Inc.’s fourth-annual ESG and defense survey.
The report finds that many money managers have loosened policies in recent years to become more receptive to defense investments. Still, 38% prohibit holding stakes in companies involved in manufacturing nuclear weapons.
“Nuclear is increasingly investable, but it remains the most contentious boundary,” Jefferies analysts wrote in a report published Friday. Where investors permit exposure, they often rely on rule-based constraints tied to alliances or treaties rather than fully endorsing the sector, the analysts said.
Most respondents also expect investors to boost allocations to aerospace and defense companies. Jefferies cited clearer policy signals, rising defense spending and the growing importance of dual-use technologies as factors lowering barriers to investment.
Defense stocks have rallied since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and the number of environmental, social and governace equity funds with exposure to the nuclear-arms industry has steadily risen. The S&P Global 1200 Aerospace & Defense Index has soared 128%, including reinvested dividends, since Russia’s attack, outperforming the 85% advance of the S&P 500 Index.
Jefferies surveyed about 60 financial-market specialists, mainly money managers and analysts.
BLOOMBERG OPINION AND ANALYSIS
- BP Departure | BP Plc’s screwup is outweighed by its hedge fund backer, wrote columnist Javier Blas.
- Bond Yields | Higher bond yields may be painful for real estate and other rate-sensitive parts of the economy, but stocks can keep growing due to the strength of the investment boom driven by the artificial intelligence industry, wrote columnist Jonathan Levin.

- Train Truckers | Commercial-truck safety has become an even hotter topic than usual after the Supreme Court ruled this month that freight brokers can be held liable in an accident involving a carrier hired by a broker, wrote columnist Thomas Black.
- Shrinking | New businesses in the US are shrinking, with most not aiming for significant growth and not providing full-time work even for their founders, wrote columnist Justin Fox.

- Battery Buffs | Australian households are making money by using their home solar-and-battery setups to sell power back to the grid when prices are high, wrote columnist David Fickling.
- Dust Storms | Dust emissions and wind erosion inflict economic damage of $154.4 billion a year in the US, and also have costly effects on human health, including worsening asthma and other breathing problems, wrote columnist Mark Gongloff.

- Carbon Emissions | If paying for carbon emissions is a tough sell, paying for someone else’s is a provocation and that seems to be happening in a small corner of the US electricity market, wrote columnist Liam Denning.
- Smaller Houses | The key to making housing more affordable is building smaller starter homes that people can afford, and changing preferences so people want to live in them, wrote columnist Allison Schrager.

FUNCTIONS FOR THE MARKET
Nvidia: A Bargain? | Nvidia Corp. is facing a classic sell-the-news reaction to its stellar earnings. The resulting cheaper valuation may be appealing to long-term buyers.
- Despite delivering another strong earnings beat, Nvidia fell 1.8% on Thursday after a significant pre-earnings runup.
- This familiar pattern indicates short-term profit-taking may prevail, while investors hold out for the next major catalysts, including faster Blackwell ramps and higher demand signals from hyperscalers.
- Nvidia’s forward price-to-earnings valuation has declined meaningfully in 2026 relative to high-growth peers, perhaps enhancing its attractiveness to discerning investors.
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ESG-FOCUSED FIXTURES
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