S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%
A daily business newspaper · Founded in 2026

Money Talk

Finance and markets: business, quotes, gold, energy and releases.

Kratos Beats Estimates as Government Defense Demand Surges 22%

Kratos Defense & Security Solutions reported fourth-quarter results on Monday that exceeded Wall Street expectations, fueled by a 22% revenue surge in its government solutions division. The contractor posted adjusted earnings of 18 cents per share on revenue of $345.1 million, outperforming analyst forecasts despite looming headwinds from federal budget delays.

Kratos Beats Estimates as Government Defense Demand Surges 22%

The company reported a net income of $5.9 million, or 3 cents per share, up from $3.9 million in the prior-year period. While bottom-line growth remained steady, the company’s adjusted earnings of 18 cents per share surpassed the 16 cents projected by FactSet. Total revenue reached $345.1 million, comfortably beating the $327.2 million anticipated by analysts as the company capitalized on increased military spending.

Growth was primarily anchored by the Government Solutions segment, which saw a 22% organic revenue increase. This performance was bolstered by double-digit gains across defense rocket systems, microwave products, and the company's space and cyber divisions. Furthermore, the Unmanned Systems business reported revenue of $68.5 million, a significant rise from $61.1 million last year, largely driven by increased activity surrounding the Valkyrie aerial vehicle program.

Navigating Federal Delays

Despite the strong finish to the year, Kratos warned that a federal government shutdown and procurement delays would likely weigh on its first-quarter performance. Management expects the timing of certain contract awards and funding to shift into the second quarter of the year. According to the company, these short-term disruptions are the result of administrative bottlenecks rather than a decrease in demand for its core defense technologies.

Share article
TelegramXFacebook

When reusing this material a link to Money Talk is required.

Comments (0)

Leave a comment

No comments yet. Be the first!