Lockheed Martin beats profit estimate, raises 2018 forecast

Reuters  |  Author 

Published Apr 24, 2018 10:46AM ET

Lockheed Martin beats profit estimate, raises 2018 forecast

By Mike Stone and Rachit Vats

(Reuters) - Lockheed Martin Corp (N:LMT) reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit and raised its full-year forecast Tuesday, but the Pentagon's No.1 weapons supplier failed to raise its outlook for cash flow, pushing shares lower.

While higher sales were driven its stealthy F-35 combat jets, shares of the company fell 3.2 percent to $346.77 on concerns the company did not raise its annual outlook for cash from operations.

The outlook for annual cash flow was the only major financial category that Lockheed did not revise higher.

"There could be some modest disappointment that the cash guidance has not been raised, but it is early in the year and cash is trickier to predict," analyst Robert Stallard of Vertical Research said in a note.

Revenue from the company's aeronautics business, which makes the F-35 jet, rose 6.7 percent to $4.4 billion. The business accounted for about 38 percent of its total revenue in the quarter.

The F-35 jet is central to the company's growth and already delivers about a quarter of its sales.

The program has been in the news recently after Reuters reported this month that the U.S. Department of Defense stopped accepting most deliveries of the F-35 over a dispute about who will cover costs for fixing a production error.

The dispute centers around whether Lockheed or its customer should pay what a source said was $118 million dollars to fix a corrosion issue discovered last year. The source spoke on condition of anonymity. Lockheed confirmed on April 11 that the Pentagon had halted deliveries of the jet over a contractual issue, but did not give further details.

During Tuesday's earning's conference call with Wall Street analysts there could be a "focus on recent F-35 newsflow," Stallard said in his note.

He added that "this was a good operating quarter from Lockheed, with an operations/tax boost to the earnings per share."

Following the U.S. tax law change passed last year, Lockheed reported its effective tax rate was 14.9 percent compared with 23.8 percent for the same quarter last year. The rate was helped in part by a $1.5 billion contribution to the company's pension plan this quarter.

Profits were up at Lockheed's Missiles and Fire Control business unit, as well as its Rotary and Mission Systems business unit, which makes Sikorsky helicopters. The Space unit saw profits fall modestly from 12 percent to 11.3 percent in part because of lower sales of a space-based infrared sensor system.

The Bethesda, Maryland-based company raised its 2018 net sales forecast to a range of $50.35 billion to $51.85 billion from a range of $50 billion to $51.50 billion.

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Full-year profit is now expected to rise between $15.80 and $16.10 per share, compared with its earlier estimate of $15.20 to $15.50 per share.

Net income rose to $1.16 billion, or $4.02 per share, in the first quarter ended March 25 from $789 million, or $2.69 per share, a year earlier.

Net sales rose to $11.64 billion from $11.21 billion.

Analysts were expecting an adjusted profit of $3.40 per shares and revenue of $11.6 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.