"During the third quarter, the men and women of Lockheed Martin continued to deliver essential products and capabilities for domestic and allied national defence and pioneering civil space endeavours," said Lockheed Martin Chairman, President and CEO James Taiclet. "At the same time, we continued to advance the state of the art and innovation across key technologies, including Future Vertical Lift, Integrated Air and Missile Defence, hypersonic weapon systems, next-generation satellites, and many others.
"In addition, we
have recently undertaken a reassessment of our five-year business plan given
recent external and programmatic events. Our conclusions, which are reflected
in our updated 2021 guidance and subsequent trend information, reflect
continuing strong cash flow generation but a slight reduction in revenue in
2022 and roughly flat to low-single-digit growth rates in both revenue and
segment operating profit over the next few years, with increasing growth
opportunities in the years that follow.
"Consequently, we
are adjusting our capital allocation strategy with two major objectives. First,
to expand further our robust reinvestment in the company to serve our
customers' evolving needs through capital projects and independent research and
development for mid-to-long-term enhanced growth performance. Simultaneously,
we plan to reward shareholders with continued dividend growth and meaningful
increases to the scale and rate of our share repurchase program. Over the
short-, mid-and long-term, we will strive to maximize cash flow per share
dynamically, based on revenue growth opportunities, inorganic investments, and
share repurchases to take full advantage of our significant cash flow generation
and strong balance sheet."
Third-quarter 2021 net
earnings include a non-cash pension settlement charge of $1.7 billion ($1.3
billion, or $4.72 per share, after-tax) related to the purchase of group
annuity contracts to transfer $4.9 billion of gross pension obligations and
related plan assets to an insurance company, and unrealized gains of $98
million ($74 million, or $0.27 per share, after-tax) due to increases in the
fair value of investments held in the Lockheed Martin Ventures Fund.
The company expects 2022 net sales to decline from expected 2021 levels to approximately $66 billion and 2022 total business segment operating margin to be approximately 11.0%. Cash from operations in 2022 is expected to be greater than or equal to $8.4 billion, which excludes a potential decrease in 2022 cash from operations of up to $2.0 billion if the provisions in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 that eliminate the option to deduct research and development expenditures in the period incurred immediately and requires companies to amortize such expenditures over five years is not modified or repealed by Congress before it takes effect on Jan. 1, 2022. Although the company continues to have ongoing discussions with members of Congress, both on its own and with other industries through coalitions, it has no assurance that these provisions will be modified or repealed.