The U.S. Air Force Just Ordered $7.8 Billion in New Missiles, and These 2 Defense Contractors Will Profit

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The U.S. Air Force Just Ordered $7.8 Billion in New Missiles, and These 2 Defense Contractors Will Profit


  • The U.S. Air Force placed a seven-year supply order for $4.3 billion worth of JASSM and LRASM missiles with Lockheed Martin.

  • The Air Force also ordered six years’ worth of AMRAAM missiles from RTX for $3.5 billion.

  • RTX will probably earn a lot more profit on its missiles than Lockheed will.

  • 10 stocks we like better than RTX ›

“A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking real money.”
— Senator Everett Dirksen

The honorable senator from Illinois went down in the history books with this famous quip about government spending — which is nowhere truer than in the defense department, where billion-dollar paydays pop up with regularity. Still, when I took a look at the list of Pentagon contracts published on July 31 in particular, I admit my eyes did goggle a little.

In just two announcements amounting to fewer than 600 words total, the U.S. government awarded Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) and RTX Corporation (NYSE: RTX) just under $7.8 billion.

Image source: Getty Images.

Both contracts concern the ordering of missiles for the United States Air Force.

Lockheed Martin’s Missiles and Fire Control division got the larger order: $4.3 billion to upsize a previous contract instructing Lockheed to build and deliver Joint Air-To-Surface Standoff Missiles (JASSM) and Long-Range, Anti-Ship Missiles (LRASM) for use by the USAF and foreign allies Finland, Japan, the Netherlands, and Poland by Jan. 31, 2033.

RTX’s Raytheon military products division was awarded $3.5 billion to supply Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles (AMRAAM) by fiscal third-quarter 2031. In addition to the U.S. Air Force, these missiles are destined for the air forces of a huge host of U.S. allies, covering almost the entire alphabet: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Japan, Kuwait, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom.

Are you impressed yet? Well, before getting too excited about the large numbers being bandied about, make sure to note the completion dates for both contracts. Lockheed Martin’s LRASM/JASSM sales, for example, run through early 2033. That means you need to spread out the $4.3 billion contract value over more than seven years to get a sense of how much annual revenue this contract will contribute, and whether it’s enough to “move the needle” on Lockheed stock.

Here’s the answer: It bumps up Lockheed Martin’s $71 billion-a-year revenue stream to perhaps $71.7 million — an increase of less than 1%.


Lockheed Martin, U.S. Air Force, Raytheon, RTX
#U.S #Air #Force #Ordered #Billion #Missiles #Defense #Contractors #Profit

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