Nathan Dean

4.0 ★★★★★
Senior US Policy Analyst, Bloomberg Intelligence
@nathandeanDC · tracked since Feb 2026
Ideas 6
Long / short 6 L/0 S
Win rate 17%
Tracked posts 5 0.07/day
Avg return -13.0%
Long return -13.0%
Short return -
New ideas 3 last 30d
Most mentioned

Pick return distribution

Live distribution of all picks with entry price. Right tail = home runs.
< -30%-30/-10-10/00/+20+20/+50+50/+100> +100%
Bottom 10%
-
Median
-
Top 10%
-

Average returns

first-opened thesis horizon: return + win-rate
7 days 6 eval.
-7.2%
L -7.2% S -
Win rate 0%
30 days 3 eval.
+0.1%
L +0.1% S -
Win rate 33%
90 days 0 eval.
-
L - S -
Win rate -
Closed-window returns from the first opened position per ticker/side. 90d = picks opened 90+ days ago
Result
Theme Stance
Ticker
Side
Theme
Entry
P&L
Thesis
First opened
Mentions
Source
Long
NatSec
$646.50
-20.7%
We think this number will be north of 100 billion... Congress is preparing for a supplemental request from the Pentagon to sustain what is happening in the Middle East. The US has already struck 15,000 targets in two weeks, rapidly depleting existing munitions stockpiles. A $100B+ supplemental package, combined with Trump's request for a 50% baseline defense budget increase, will flow directly to the prime contractors manufacturing these weapons. LONG. The sheer volume of ordnance expended guarantees years of backlog for major defense primes to restock the military. The supplemental bill gets tied to unrelated partisan issues (like farm aid) and fails to pass through congressional reconciliation.
Mar 13
Long
NatSec
$204.52
-15.3%
We think this number will be north of 100 billion... Congress is preparing for a supplemental request from the Pentagon to sustain what is happening in the Middle East. The US has already struck 15,000 targets in two weeks, rapidly depleting existing munitions stockpiles. A $100B+ supplemental package, combined with Trump's request for a 50% baseline defense budget increase, will flow directly to the prime contractors manufacturing these weapons. LONG. The sheer volume of ordnance expended guarantees years of backlog for major defense primes to restock the military. The supplemental bill gets tied to unrelated partisan issues (like farm aid) and fails to pass through congressional reconciliation.
Mar 13
Long
Healthcare
$5.24
-5.9%
Marijuana reclassification lowers taxes, spurs M&A.
Apr 22
Long
Consumer
$7.68
-23.2%
Marijuana reclassification lowers taxes, spurs M&A.
Apr 22
Long
NatSec
$698.61
-19.8%
The speaker stated a ~$1.5 trillion defense budget request is President Trump's top priority, with ~$350 billion aimed for reconciliation to speed up the process. He explicitly said, "from the investor point of view, that's going to flow into the defense contractors much quicker than something like a five, six, seven year program," naming Lockheed Martin, RTX, and Northrop Grumman. The use of reconciliation is intended to bypass Democratic opposition and get funding approved faster. The analyst's focus is on the immediate allocation ("how much can you bank in the year one, in year two"), which would provide a more immediate revenue boost to prime contractors than traditional multi-year programs. The political priority of the budget and the strategy to accelerate spending via reconciliation create a favorable, near-term catalyst for major defense contractors. Legislative gridlock could delay or reduce the final appropriation amount. The reconciliation strategy could face procedural or political hurdles.
Apr 06
Long
NatSec
$209.82
+6.8%
We think this number will be north of 100 billion... Congress is preparing for a supplemental request from the Pentagon to sustain what is happening in the Middle East. The US has already struck 15,000 targets in two weeks, rapidly depleting existing munitions stockpiles. A $100B+ supplemental package, combined with Trump's request for a 50% baseline defense budget increase, will flow directly to the prime contractors manufacturing these weapons. LONG. The sheer volume of ordnance expended guarantees years of backlog for major defense primes to restock the military. The supplemental bill gets tied to unrelated partisan issues (like farm aid) and fails to pass through congressional reconciliation.
Mar 13
Showing 6 of 6 picks · sorted by mentions