Would you trust an aircraft manufacturer to build good ships and maintain a competitive ship building industry? The idea of Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin building our Navy's ships has always given me the creeps.
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Shipbuilding Is Drag On Northrop Profit
By August Cole
Wall Street Journal
July 30, 2008
Northrop Grumman Corp.'s shot at a $40 billion U.S. Air Force aerial-refueling-tanker contract may be up in the air, but analysts focused Tuesday on the company's shipbuilding operations on the Gulf of Mexico during a second-quarter conference call.
Los Angeles-based Northrop said net income rose 7.6% to $495 million, or $1.44 a share, from $460 million, or $1.31 a share, a year earlier. Revenue rose 9.5% to $8.63 billion.
Northrop Chief Executive Ronald D. Sugar said the company believes the Airbus-based tanker that it offered along with partner European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co. remains the best choice for the U.S. Air Force. "New tankers are urgently needed now, and our KC-45 is ready to go now," he said.
After Boeing Co. successfully protested Northrop's victory earlier this year, the Defense Department is expected to solicit bids in the coming weeks in hopes of picking a new winner by year end.
Despite the overall improvement in Northrop's financial performance, its shipbuilding division continues to experience problems from the devastation brought by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Operating income in the shipbuilding division slipped 6% to $126 million, despite a 24% increase in revenue to $1.69 billion.
Northrop surprised investors during the first quarter when it announced a $326 million charge blamed largely on botched electrical cabling on a Navy amphibious assault ship, the Makin Island.
During a conference call, President Wes Bush said he is confident the ship's fiber-optic cabling will be completed later this year. "I would add that timely accomplishment of this milestone is critical to our ability to support the test program on the delivery timeline that we've established," said Mr. Bush.
That step is crucial to delivering the ship to the Navy in the second quarter of 2009, and to shifting workers to other ships under construction. Northrop has said a shortage of experienced workers in the area hurt its ability to fully recover from the hurricane's effects.
The Makin Island is on Wall Street's radar because Northrop, not the Navy, is paying for the redone work. The problems required Northrop to pull workers away from other projects at the Ingalls shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss. In a sign of how seriously Northrop's management is taking the situation, Mr. Bush reviews the ship's progress weekly.
Northrop shares were down $1.13, or 1.7%, at $67.54 in 4 p.m. composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange.