Defense industry leader Lockheed Martin (LMT) has been awarded a pair of significant U.S. Department of Defense agreements totaling approximately $2.8 billion, supporting both the F-35 stealth fighter platform and CH-53K heavy helicopter initiatives.
Shares of LMT began trading Friday at $539.94, representing a 1.52% decline for the session. The current price remains considerably beneath the 52-week peak of $692.00 and trades below the 200-day simple moving average of $562.41.
Lockheed Martin Corporation, LMT
The primary contract carries a $2.29 billion valuation structured as a cost-plus-incentive-fee indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity arrangement. This agreement encompasses comprehensive sustainment operations for the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter platform.
The scope includes site activation services, fleet management operations, interim contractor support functions, and reliability improvement initiatives. End users span the Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy, Foreign Military Sales participants, and F-35 Cooperative Program Partners.
Geographically, F-35 sustainment activities will primarily occur at Fort Worth, Texas facilities (85% of work), with supplementary operations in Orlando, Florida. The performance period extends through December 2028.
The secondary agreement flows to Sikorsky Aircraft, a Lockheed subsidiary, carrying a ceiling value of $525 million. This contract addresses non-recurring engineering efforts, integration activities, and flight-test support services for the CH-53K Heavy Lift Helicopter initiative.
The beneficiaries include the Marine Corps, Navy, and an international Foreign Military Sales partner. Primary execution sites include Stratford, Connecticut (65.2% of workload) and West Palm Beach, Florida (19.93%), with the completion date scheduled for June 2031.
Neither contract includes immediate fund obligations at award. Instead, financial commitments will occur incrementally as individual task orders are issued. Naval Air Systems Command located in Patuxent River, Maryland, serves as the contracting authority.
Korea Investment Corp expanded its LMT holdings by 17.1% during the fourth quarter, elevating its total position to 175,294 shares worth roughly $84.78 million. Multiple additional institutional participants have similarly increased their exposure.
Welch Group LLC grew its position by 1.5% in Q4. Both Clough Capital Partners and Jain Global LLC established fresh positions during Q3. Institutional ownership collectively represents 74.19% of outstanding Lockheed Martin shares.
Lockheed’s first quarter 2026 performance fell short of Wall Street expectations. The defense contractor reported earnings per share of $6.44, undershooting the consensus forecast of $6.79. Revenue registered at $18.02 billion against projections of $18.38 billion.
Top-line growth measured just 0.3% on a year-over-year basis. Management guidance for full-year 2026 EPS spans $29.35–$30.25, while analyst models center around $29.88 annually.
Analyst perspectives remain divided. Citigroup reduced its price objective from $675 down to $571 while maintaining a “neutral” stance. Morgan Stanley lowered its target from $675 to $653 alongside an “equal weight” designation. Bank of America decreased its objective to $600, also carrying a “neutral” rating.
Conversely, DZ Bank elevated LMT to “strong buy” status in late April. Wells Fargo commenced coverage with an “equal weight” rating paired with a $650 target.
The prevailing consensus among 21 covering analysts stands at “Hold,” with a mean price objective of $620.68—approximately 15% above Friday’s opening quotation.
The company has also announced a quarterly dividend distribution of $3.45 per share, scheduled for June 26 payment, yielding 2.6% on an annualized basis.
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