By Cal Biesecker
Defense Daily
Huntington Ingalls Industries on Thursday posted a steep drop in second-quarter earnings, mainly on charges at its shipyards due to efficiency and staffing challenges, at least some of which stem from COVID-19, and the company lowered its top and bottom line guidance for the year.
On a conference call with investors on Thursday, President and CEO Mike Petters said Huntington Ingalls is increasingly focused on Department of Energy nuclear sites, and that “we have a line of sight there on things that our customers are looking for and capabilities that they need.”
The company in 2018 expanded its reached into the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) by hooking on as a subcontractor with Los Alamos National Laboratory prime Triad Nuclear Security.
During the quarter, Huntington Ingalls’ Nationwide Remediation Partners joint venture with Navarro Research and Engineering was one of nine corporate teams to receive an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract from the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management for nationwide deactivation, decommissioning, and removal services for excess defense-nuclear facilities. The pacts have a 10-year ordering period and collectively have a maximum value of $3 billion.
Huntington Ingalls bid on the $4 billion to $6 billion support services contract at the Hanford Site in Washington state, then unsuccessfully protested the Environmental Management December 2019 award to a team led by Leidos. That vendor, Hanford Mission Integration Solutions, this week received a notice to proceed to operations from the Energy Department.
As Petters told investors this week that “we have thoughts” about how to spread further into the DOE complex, one industry source said Huntington Ingalls was mulling a partnership with BWX Technologies to bid on a potentially 10-year, $28-billion deal to manage the NNSA’s Pantex Plant in Amarillo, Texas, and Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, Tenn. The DOE’s semiautonomous weapons agency expects to issue a draft solicitation for the combined site-management contract in August, after deciding in July that the Bechtel National-led incumbent’s contract would end on Sept. 30, 2021.
Petters didn’t put all the blame all HII’s second-quarter charges on COVID-19, but said even where the impacts weren’t directly related to the pandemic, it’s hard to separate the indirect effects from the ongoing disruptions created by the novel coronavirus.
When things go wrong, Petters said the company first looks inward to say, “Hey, that’s on us. We didn’t manage that right.”
However, the pandemic has created mounting challenges that in some cases are hard to quantify.
“But you don’t have to scratch very far behind those things and either there was a direct impact of COVID or indirect impact of COVID or we just don’t have the degrees of freedom that we need to be able to recover from that inefficiency because of COVID and so the challenge is, we can isolate costs in our business that are 100% COVID-related but when you move to the rest of it and say, ‘Hey, we have inefficiencies in a program performance,’ to try to separate out how much of that is, ‘This is because we didn’t have the right person at the right time and this is because we had impact from virus,’ it becomes really hard to separate all of that,” he said.
Net income in the quarter plunged 59 % to $53 million, $1.30 earnings a share, from $128 million, or $3.07 a share, a year ago, well below consensus estimates of $4.30 a share. The charges were partially offset by favorable pension benefits. Operating margin was 2.8% versus 8% a year ago.
Sales in the quarter fell 7% to $2 billion from $2.2 billion a year ago.
At the operating level, Newport News drove the lower overall earnings decline as the segment swung to a loss on the charges. Sales at the segment were also lower.
Sales at the Ingalls Shipbuilding segment were flat versus a year ago, but profits were also down due to COVID impacts and lower risk retirement on the Coast Guard’s National Security Cutter program.
The company’s Technical Solutions segment also posted flat sales but higher profits because of a loss on a fleet support contract that hurt income a year ago.
Guidance for the year assumes that the government will provide limited relief for costs directly related to the company’s response to COVID-19 such as enhanced cleaning of facilities but not for any delays and disruptions.
HII gave high level guidance for 2021, with shipbuilding sales between $7.8 billion and $8.1 billion and operating margin climbing to between 7 and 8 %. Sales at Technical Solutions will be around $1 billion and margin between 7% and 9%.
Backlog at the end of the second quarter stood at $46.1 billion, down $400 million since the end of 2019, and provides a “stable foundation for the business,” Chris Kastner, HII’s chief financial officer, said on the call.
This story first appeared in Weapons Complex Monitor affiliate publication Defense Daily.