General Dynamics Wins $69M Deal For The Stryker Land Vehicle

 | Jun 21, 2018 04:27AM ET

General Dynamics Corporation’s (NYSE:GD) business unit, Land Systems, recently secured a $68.6 million modification contract to upgrade Stryker flat-bottom vehicles to the patented double V-hull design. The contract was awarded by the U.S. Army Contracting Command, Warren, MI.

Work related to the deal will be performed in Sterling Heights, MI, and is expected to get completed in Mar 31, 2020. General Dynamics will utilize fiscal 2017 Army procurement of weapons and tracked combat vehicles’ funds for completing the task.

Benefits of the Stryker Land Vehicle

The eight-wheeled, armored combat vehicle is powered by a 350 horsepower Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) JP-8 diesel engine that provides the U.S. Army with an effective mix of capabilities, including infantry transport, offensive firepower and reconnaissance. The Stryker's other capabilities include the anti-tank guided missiles, mobile C4ISR, engineering and fire support, mobile gun system, and medical evacuation.

Prone to devastating IED attacks in Afghanistan, the vehicle was outfitted with a new double-V hull. Such improvements in the design led to staggering improvements in soldier survivability, providing protection in open terrain areas.

Our View

With widespread geo-political tension around the globe, many nations are strengthening their arsenals and taking initiatives to upgrade land-combat military vehicles. This, in turn, should boost General Dynamics’ growth, with the company being one of the major players in the wheeled military vehicle market.

Notably, General Dynamics' Combat Systems segment that manufactures wheeled combat vehicles registered $1.44 billion of sales in the first quarter of 2018, reflecting 11.9% year-over-year growth. We may expect General Dynamics to witness similar strong results in this segment in upcoming quarters, buoyed by strong demand for its combat-proven war vehicles that eventually led to the latest contract win. This, in turn, should expand the company’s profit margin.

Furthermore, the fiscal 2019 defense budget, recently approved by the U.S. Senate, provisions for a spending plan of $5.8 billion on Ground Systems. Such robust budgetary allotments should aid General Dynamics in acquiring major contracts from the Pentagon, related to its wheeled combat and tactical vehicles.

Price Movement

General Dynamics’s stock has lost 4.9% in the last year compared with its industry ’s growth of 31.4%. The underperformance may have been caused by the intense competition that the company faces in the aerospace-defense space.