On January 7, 2026, the president issued an Executive Order titled “Prioritizing the Warfighter in Defense Contracting” (the “Order”). The Order directs the Department of War and other agencies to take immediate and forward-looking actions intended to reshape financial and governance incentives at major defense contractors.
The Order places executive compensation squarely within the government’s performance and accountability framework for defense contractors, affecting incentive design, capital-return-linked pay, and, in certain circumstances, executive base salaries. This alert highlights key action items and considerations for boards of directors and general counsel, with a focus on executive compensation and related governance issues.
For executives, the Order introduces the possibility of reduced incentive payouts, altered performance metrics, and, in certain circumstances, constraints on base salary growth tied to performance remediation.
1. Immediate Prohibition on Dividends and Stock Buybacks. The Order states that, effective immediately, covered defense contractors (“covered entities”) may not pay dividends or engage in stock buybacks until they are able to deliver “a superior product, on time and on budget.”
While framed as a capital allocation directive, this restriction has direct executive compensation implications because:
Boards and compensation committees should recognize that restrictions on capital returns may materially affect incentive outcomes even if compensation plans are not formally amended.
In practice, these restrictions may require compensation committees to exercise discretion more frequently to address incentive outcomes that no longer reflect management execution. Where discretion is used, committees should ensure that the rationale for any adjustments is clearly documented, particularly in anticipation of heightened scrutiny of compensation decisions.
2. Board Readiness for Performance Identification and Remediation. Within 30 days of the Order, and on a continuing basis thereafter, the secretary of war is directed to identify defense contractors for critical weapons, supplies, and equipment that are underperforming, insufficiently investing in production capacity, not prioritizing U.S. government contracts, or producing at insufficient speed, and that engaged in stock buybacks or corporate distributions during the relevant period.
If a contractor is identified:
For contractors already identified and studied as of the date of the Order, an additional review may not be required, at the secretary’s discretion.
While the Order does not mandate compensation-related remediation, boards should anticipate that incentive alignment may be reviewed where performance concerns relate to investment, production capacity, or delivery obligations.
3. Contract-Driven Redesign of Executive Incentives and Potential Salary Constraints. Within 60 days, the secretary of war is directed to ensure that future defense contracts and renewals include provisions requiring that:
Future contracts must also permit the secretary, upon a finding of underperformance or insufficient prioritization, investment, or production speed, to:
These provisions reflect an expectation that executive compensation be explicitly aligned with operational execution and production readiness.
Boards should also consider how contract-mandated salary caps may interact with existing employment agreements, annual increase practices, and change-in-control protections. In particular, base salary freeze provisions may constrain future pay actions even where incentive compensation is under review or being redesigned.
For Boards:
For General Counsel:
Boards and general counsel at defense contractors may wish to consider the following steps:
The Order introduces immediate constraints and future contractual requirements that elevate executive compensation as a core governance and compliance consideration for defense contractors. While implementation will depend on future contract language and enforcement actions, boards and general counsel should expect executive compensation to play a more prominent role in defense-contract oversight.
We will continue to monitor developments and are available to assist with compensation design reviews, contract negotiations, and board-level governance planning.