Huntington Ingalls Lands $9.5 Billion in New Navy Warship Orders

Source The Motley Fool

One for you, two for me. $6.75 billion for you ... $9.5 billion for me.

For the longest time, the U.S. Navy has been dependent upon just two large military shipbuilders to build the bulk of its fleet: General Dynamics (NYSE: GD) and Huntington Ingalls (NYSE: HII). Essentially every submarine and destroyer in active service in the Navy today came from one of these companies. Beyond those two classes, General Dynamics also builds fuel replenishment ships and various other support vessels for the Navy, while Huntington Ingalls handles the construction of aircraft carriers and amphibious assault ships.

But while the Navy tries to divide its shipbuilding contracts between these two giant defense contractors roughly down the middle, sometimes it doesn't work out that way.

A shipbuilding duopoly for Uncle Sam

Last month, for example, the U.S. Navy awarded General Dynamics a sole-source contract to build it eight John Lewis-class fleet replenishment oilers -- vessels that refuel and resupply other ships while they are underway. All of those new oilers, hull numbers T-AO 214 through T-AO 221, are scheduled to be delivered by January 2035. The total value of that contract ran to $6.8 billion -- and Huntington Ingalls wasn't so much as asked to submit a bid on it. As the Pentagon explained in its contract announcement, "this contract was not competitively procured" -- they just handed it to General Dynamics on a silver platter.

Some Huntington Ingalls shareholders might have been a bit miffed at that, but they shouldn't have been. Just a couple of weeks later, Huntington Ingalls got two construction contracts of its own. At least one of these was also "not competitively procured," and when combined, they add up to much more money than General Dynamics will get for the oilers.

Huntington Ingall's new contracts

Valued at $5.8 billion, the first contract tasks Huntington Ingalls with designing and building three "Flight II" amphibious transport dock ships for the Navy, with hull numbers LPD 33, LPD 34, and LPD 35. Also known as landing platform docks (hence the "LPD" designation), these vessels specialize in transporting troops, landing vessels, and helicopters to theaters of conflict, there to disgorge them upon hostile shores.

Each Flight II vessel will be able to carry hundreds of marines and their equipment, along with a combination of up to four helicopters or V-22 Osprey vertical take-off and landing aircraft, as well as a combination of up to two "LCAC" landing hovercraft and or up to 14 amphibious assault vehicles.

Separately, Huntington Ingalls was awarded a $3.7 billion contract to begin work on building a new Flight I America-class amphibious assault ship. Also known as a landing helicopter assault ship (and LHA), this type of warship resembles a small aircraft carrier in appearance. According to Huntington Ingalls, in addition to carrying a Marine complement nearly three times as large as that on an LPD, a typical LHA might be equipped with five F-35B short take-off and landing stealth fighter jets, a dozen V-22s, a half dozen attack helicopters, and a half dozen search and rescue and transport helicopters.

What it means to investors

Armaments aside, what's most interesting about these contracts to investors is the fact that, combined, Huntington Ingalls has just been awarded contracts worth about 50% more than those that General Dynamics won two weeks earlier.

That alone sounds pretty good, but the news gets even better when you realize that Huntington Ingalls is a much smaller (and more maritime-focused) company than General Dynamics, which is more of a defense contracting conglomerate, with businesses operating on land, air, and sea. This magnifies the importance of a large contract win for a (relatively) small company.

Huntington Ingalls carries a market capitalization of just $10.2 billion -- a small fraction of General Dynamics' $83.4 billion-plus market cap. What's more, Huntington Ingalls' has $11.8 billion in annual revenue, which makes it comfortably cheaper than my usual target valuation for defense contractors of 1.0 times sales. Huntington Ingalls is, in fact, valued at a bit less than 0.9 times sales -- while General Dynamics today has a valuation of 1.9 times sales.

And now, in a single day, Huntington Ingalls has gained contracts worth nearly a full year of revenue.

Suffice it to say that, when evaluating defense stocks for future investment, Huntington Ingalls stock just moved to the top of my list. I've got nothing to say against General Dynamics as a company, but HII stock just looks like a better value to me.

Should you invest $1,000 in Huntington Ingalls Industries right now?

Before you buy stock in Huntington Ingalls Industries, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Huntington Ingalls Industries wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $752,838!*

Stock Advisor provides investors with an easy-to-follow blueprint for success, including guidance on building a portfolio, regular updates from analysts, and two new stock picks each month. The Stock Advisor service has more than quadrupled the return of S&P 500 since 2002*.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of September 30, 2024

Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Bitcoin Bottom Debate: $70,000 or $50,000? Where is the Bitcoin bottom? Can you buy the dip now? Cathie Wood suggests swapping gold for Bitcoin.On Tuesday (February 3), panic in the crypto market eased as Bitcoin ( BTC) prices reb
Author  TradingKey
9 hours ago
Where is the Bitcoin bottom? Can you buy the dip now? Cathie Wood suggests swapping gold for Bitcoin.On Tuesday (February 3), panic in the crypto market eased as Bitcoin ( BTC) prices reb
placeholder
Bitcoin Reaches ‘Fire-Sale’ Valuations as ETF Outflows Jump, Says BitwiseBitcoin’s two-year rolling MVRV z-score has dropped to its lowest level ever, pointing to extreme undervaluation.
Author  Mitrade
9 hours ago
Bitcoin’s two-year rolling MVRV z-score has dropped to its lowest level ever, pointing to extreme undervaluation.
placeholder
Analyst Flags XRP as Market’s ‘Best Risk/Reward’ Play as Token Tests Critical $1.60 SupportCrypto analyst Scott Melker identifies a prime risk/reward setup for XRP as it tests key support at $1.60, offering a tight stop-loss against potential upside targets near $2.00.
Author  Mitrade
13 hours ago
Crypto analyst Scott Melker identifies a prime risk/reward setup for XRP as it tests key support at $1.60, offering a tight stop-loss against potential upside targets near $2.00.
placeholder
Bitcoin Slips Below 75,000 Mark. Will Strategy Change Its Mind and Sell?Bitcoin prices briefly fell below $75,000, hitting a new 10-month low, though the probability of continued short-term downside remains low.On Monday (February 12), the cryptocurrency mark
Author  TradingKey
Yesterday 10: 47
Bitcoin prices briefly fell below $75,000, hitting a new 10-month low, though the probability of continued short-term downside remains low.On Monday (February 12), the cryptocurrency mark
placeholder
Bitcoin Faces Risk of Deeper Losses as Price Action Echoes Past Bear MarketsBitcoin price targets remain bearish as it struggles near multi-month lows, influenced by historical bear market trends.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 10: 22
Bitcoin price targets remain bearish as it struggles near multi-month lows, influenced by historical bear market trends.
goTop
quote