HR-9283-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Ro Khanna (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would require investment companies to notify the Department of Defense (DoD) before completing any acquisition that gives them 25% or more equity interest or effective control of a major defense supplier. The DoD would review each proposed transaction for effects on national security, competition for defense contracts, financial stability of the supplier, and the health of the defense industrial base. The DoD would then report its findings to antitrust authorities (the FTC or DOJ) within 30 days. The bill would also require the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base Policy to conduct a review of defense-sector merger and acquisition activity every three years and report findings to Congress.
Who benefits
The Department of Defense, which would gain a formal review mechanism over investment-driven ownership changes at its key suppliers. Smaller or mid-tier defense contractors that may face less pressure from financially driven ownership changes. Taxpayers and the broader public, to the extent that supply chain stability reduces cost overruns or program failures. Defense sector workers whose employers may be shielded from financially motivated restructuring. Antitrust regulators at the FTC and DOJ, who would receive DoD assessments to inform their own reviews. Congressional defense committees, which would receive triennial reports on industrial base health.
Who is hurt
Private equity firms, hedge funds, and other investment companies that acquire stakes in defense contractors, who would face new notification requirements and potential delays or scrutiny of transactions. Major defense contractors that are acquisition targets, whose deal timelines and valuations could be affected. Institutional investors with existing or planned positions in defense suppliers. Legal and compliance departments at investment firms, which would bear administrative costs of the new notification process. Potentially, defense contractors seeking private capital for growth or restructuring, if investor interest declines due to added regulatory friction.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that private equity and investment firm ownership of critical defense suppliers poses a documented risk to national security, pointing to cases where financially driven cost-cutting and asset stripping have degraded supplier capabilities and increased program costs. They contend that the existing Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) process focuses on foreign ownership threats and leaves a gap for domestic investment firms whose financial incentives may still conflict with long-term defense readiness. The bill's 30-day reporting requirement to antitrust authorities would also strengthen coordination between defense and competition regulators, addressing a structural blind spot in current oversight of the defense industrial base.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding a DoD pre-merger review layer on top of existing Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust notification requirements creates duplicative regulatory burdens that could deter private capital from the defense sector at a time when defense contractors need investment to modernize and compete. They contend that the bill's definition of "major defense supplier" is broad enough to capture a wide range of companies — including those with only indirect or potential ties to DoD — creating legal uncertainty and compliance costs that may discourage beneficial transactions. Critics may also argue that the bill does not grant DoD clear authority to block transactions, potentially making the review process a costly procedural step without meaningful enforcement teeth.