The Pentagon released 161 files on Friday, totaling thousands of pages, about what the government calls “Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena,” or UAPs. The release was directed by President Donald Trump, who said earlier this year he would make the files public due to widespread public interest.
The documents are now available on the Department of Defense website, with more releases expected. They span decades and include declassified military memos, Apollo Moon mission reports, and civilian witness accounts.

One report describes an aircraft that in 2023 made multiple 90-degree turns at an estimated 80 miles per hour. That kind of maneuverability would point to advanced propulsion and materials technology, areas relevant to companies like Lockheed Martin and GE Aerospace.
Another report describes a football-sized object in the East China Sea that hit the water at high speed in 2022, with no splash and no change in velocity. That performance could interest investors in shipbuilders like General Dynamics and Huntington-Ingalls Industries.
FBI reports within the documents describe objects that were invisible to the eye but detectable by radar. This is comparable to optical cloaking, a technology area associated with stealth-focused defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman.
In 2023, a pilot reported that their weapons systems were completely disabled as they approached a small UAP. This type of electronic interference falls into the category of jamming and electronic warfare, areas where companies like RTX, BAE Systems, and L3Harris Technologies operate.
Despite the intriguing descriptions, analysts do not expect the UFO files to lift defense stocks. The iShares Aerospace & Defense ETF is down 8% since the start of fighting in Iran. Investors are focused on spending trends and geopolitics, not UAP reports.
Lockheed Martin reported a 1% year-over-year drop in aeronautics revenue in the first quarter of 2026. The company said the decline was primarily due to lower sales of around $325 million on classified programs. Classified program spending at Lockheed is expected to total between $500 million and $700 million for the full year 2026, according to BofA estimates.
The file release follows renewed public interest in UAPs that picked up after Congress held its first UFO hearings in 50 years in 2022. Former President Barack Obama added fuel to that interest in a February interview, saying aliens were “real,” though he later clarified he saw no direct evidence during his time in office.
Trump directed the Pentagon to release files related to alien life, UAPs, and UFOs shortly after that interview. The 161 documents now online represent the first wave of that release.
Many of the images included in the files are described as blurry or show black dots. The practical investment takeaway remains limited for now.
Members of the public can view the files directly at war.gov/UFO.
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