With recession fears mounting and inflation proving stubbornly persistent, investors are increasingly searching for stocks that can hold their ground when economic conditions deteriorate. The ideal candidates combine pricing power, essential products or services, and a long, unbroken history of dividend payments — qualities that allow them to generate reliable income regardless of the broader market environment. Two stocks that consistently rise to the top of this conversation are and , a defense giant and a consumer staples titan whose businesses are built to endure. Together, they offer a rare combination of income, resilience, and inflation protection that few other equities can match.
Why LMT and PG Are Built to Weather Inflation and Recession
Lockheed Martin’s business model is uniquely engineered to resist inflation from the ground up. Approximately 40% of the company’s revenue is tied to cost-plus government contracts, which allow it to pass higher costs directly through to the end customer — in this case, primarily the U.S. federal government. For the remaining 60% of revenue derived from fixed-price contracts, Lockheed requires its suppliers to enter into fixed-price arrangements for the full duration of each project, effectively pushing inflation risk further down the supply chain rather than absorbing it internally.
Beyond its contract structure, Lockheed benefits from what analysts describe as a “timeless, expensive” government need: defense. As the world’s largest defense contractor, supplying combat aircraft like the F-35, missile defense systems, military helicopters, and satellite systems, the company commands a large and growing backlog of work that provides multiyear revenue visibility.
Defense budgets fluctuate, but the baseline of spending remains consistently high, insulating Lockheed from the kind of demand swings that hurt more cyclical businesses. With an A- credit rating and relatively low debt, the company is also well-positioned to absorb rising interest rates that often accompany inflationary periods.
Procter & Gamble’s inflation protection is rooted in brand dominance and consumer necessity. The company sells household staples, laundry detergent, diapers, shampoo, cleaning products, that consumers purchase regardless of economic conditions. Crucially, P&G’s portfolio of over 20 billion-dollar brands, including Tide, Pampers, Gillette, and Head & Shoulders, commands the kind of retailer shelf presence that gives the company genuine pricing power: when costs rise, P&G can raise prices and retailers cannot easily say no, because consumers expect to find these brands when they shop.
To further defend its market position during downturns, P&G employs a deliberate value-tiering strategy, offering various pack sizes and price points so that consumers who are feeling financial pressure can trade down within the P&G family rather than switching to a competitor. This approach has allowed the company to maintain broadly stable demand across multiple recessions.
P&G has paid uninterrupted dividends for 134 years, a streak that spans the Great Depression, multiple financial crises, and global pandemics — arguably the most compelling single data point in dividend investing.
Current Market Data and Key Metrics: What Investors Need to Know
As of March 11, 2026, Lockheed Martin (LMT) is trading at approximately $649, representing a remarkable year-to-date gain of 34.89% — far outpacing the ′s 0.85% decline over the same period. Over one year, LMT has returned 42.20% versus the index’s 21.81%, and over five years the stock has nearly doubled with a 118.65% total return, comfortably beating the broader market.
The company’s most recent quarterly earnings beat expectations, with Q4 FY2025 EPS coming in at $5.80 against an estimate of $5.75. Full-year FY2025 revenues reached $75 billion, representing 6% year-over-year growth, and free cash flow of $6.9 billion exceeded guidance. Management has projected 5% sales growth and more than 25% segment profit growth for FY2026, driven by ramping missile production and strategic investments.
On the valuation side, LMT trades at a forward P/E of 21.69 and a notably low PEG ratio of 1.39, suggesting the stock is not particularly stretched relative to its expected earnings growth — especially for a company in a geopolitically favorable environment. The forward dividend yield stands at 2.07%, with an annual dividend of $13.50 per share.
Analyst price targets range from $517 on the low end to $740 on the high, with a consensus average of $657.58. The most recent analyst action came from Citigroup in February 2026, which maintained a Neutral rating while raising its price target from $592 to $673, reflecting confidence in Lockheed’s near-term earnings trajectory.
Procter & Gamble (PG) presents a more defensive picture in the current environment. The stock is trading around $152, having pulled back roughly 9.64% over the past year, though it has outperformed the broader index on a year-to-date basis with a 7% gain. That underperformance on a one-year basis reflects some macro headwinds: recession fears have weighed on consumer staples broadly, and gross margin ticked down modestly to 50.68% in Q2 FY2026.
However, net margin improved to 19.39% in the same period, and Q2 FY2026 revenues came in at $22.2 billion with core EPS of $1.88 — flat year-over-year but slightly ahead of the $1.86 consensus estimate. Management reaffirmed full-year guidance and expects acceleration in the second half of the fiscal year driven by product innovation.
The stock currently offers a forward dividend yield of 2.71%, with an annualized dividend of $4.23 per share and a market cap of approximately $356 billion. Valuation metrics show a trailing P/E of 23.11 and a forward P/E of 21.23, which is roughly in line with historical norms for a consumer staples business of this quality.
The analyst consensus average price target sits at $168, representing meaningful upside from current levels, and Wall Street maintains an overall bullish stance with an average recommendation score of 1.94 — near the Strong Buy boundary. For income-focused investors with a long time horizon, PG’s current yield sits above its five-year average, a signal that historically has indicated an attractive entry point relative to the stock’s own valuation history.
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