Data Reveals Big Drop In U.S. Arms Sales.

* Implemented cases of foreign military sales and direct commercial sales of weapon systems to international customers by U.S. manufacturers plummeted last year, according to data released in December by the Biden administration.

While analysts had already been tracking a significant decrease in the value of announced potential sales, government statistics also show a drop in cases that made it to implementation.

For fiscal year 2021, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency executed $34.81 billion in implemented arm sales cases, including: $28.67 billion funded by U.S. allies and partners under the State Department's Foreign Military Sales program; $3.8 billion under the Foreign Military Financing program; and $2.34 billion under the Defense Department's Foreign Assistance Act and Building Partner Capacity programs.

Meanwhile, direct commercial sales of equipment by U.S. industry to foreign buyers totaled $103.4 billion, the agency announced.

Combined, the numbers add up to $138.21 billion. In comparison, FMS and DCS totaled $50.78 billion and $124.3 billion in 2020, respectively, for a combined total value of $175.08 billion.

"Final FMS/DCS numbers for FY '21... were down significantly," at 31 percent and 17 percent year-over-year respectively, said the Cowen Washington Research Group in an email to industry.

Those numbers are also way down from 2019, when FMS totaled $55.4 billion and direct commercial sales reached $114.7 billion.

"We're surprised by the magnitude of the drop, which suggests FMS/DCS sales will be a headwind for...

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