NYSE • USD • INDUSTRIALS • AEROSPACE & DEFENSE
Current price is 61.1% of 52-week range
Last updated 23 days ago
Huntington Ingalls is the essential U.S. prime for nuclear aircraft carriers and a key builder of submarines and amphibious ships, giving it a durable moat built on specialized labor, regulated yards, and long-cycle Navy programs. The $48.7B backlog exiting 2024 and backlog that expanded to about $55.7B by 3Q25 support multi-year revenue visibility, while Mission Technologies adds higher-tech services and unmanned systems exposure. The recent “physical AI” welding/automation partnership is strategically sound because throughput and rework, not demand, are the binding constraints in shipbuilding.
Financially, execution improved meaningfully: 2025 segment operating income rose to $717M with a 5.7% segment operating margin versus 5.0% in 2024, and free cash flow rebounded to about $800M (vs. ~$40M in 2024), indicating better program performance and working-capital capture. Full-year 2025 EPS was reported at about $15.39, but valuation is harder to pin down because widely cited P/E and market-cap figures vary across sources and dates, so coverage is limited on a single “current” multiple. The dividend is $1.38 quarterly ($5.52 annualized), modestly yielding around ~1.3% near late-February 2026 pricing.
The 12-month setup hinges on whether HII sustains margin/FCF normalization as it ramps complex work (notably carriers/subs) and invests in yard productivity; management’s 2026 outlook calls for shipbuilding revenue of roughly $9.7–$9.9B and Mission Technologies revenue of $3.0–$3.2B, with 2026 free cash flow guided lower than 2025 (around $500–$600M). Key catalysts are continued favorable contract award/funding cadence and measurable throughput gains from process automation; key risks are quarterly volatility from working-capital swings, labor availability, and any unfavorable contract adjustments on fixed-price work.
Recommendation: HOLD. Improving execution and deep backlog support the business, but near-term free-cash-flow step-down guidance and program/working-capital volatility make risk-reward less asymmetric at today’s less clearly “cheap” valuation.