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.





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