Lockheed Martin Corp

NYSE: LMT
$571.92
+$6.74 (+1.2%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

LMT Articles

The U.S. Department of Defense and the U.S. Air Force have announced a multiple-award contract with a ceiling of nearly $21 billion for Air Force Training Systems.
In order to make money you have to spend money. Among those who live by those words are defense contractors.
Lockheed Martin has announced that it entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Sikorsky Aircraft from United Technology for $9 billion.
If the reports are accurate, Lockheed Martin may be paying $8 billion or more to United Technology for its Sikorsky unit.
On Sunday, a Falcon 9 rocket disintegrated just minutes after launch from Cape Canaveral as it was on a mission to resupply the International Space Station.
The U.S. Air Force wants to retire the A-10, aka the Warthog, and move the maintenance crews to the anointed successor F-35. The GAO is not convinced.
The U.S. State Department recently approved two sales of military equipment to Lebanon: Tucano turboprop fighter planes and Hellfire II missiles.
According to the Federal Procurement Data System, the top 10 federal contractors in fiscal year 2014 raked about half of all dollars awarded.
The single largest customer for the Airbus A400M military transport aircraft is tired of waiting for the company to deliver the remaining planes in its order.
The windows for insiders to buy and sell stock sure look like they came flying open this week, as insiders at top companies dipped into their wallets and started buying stock big time.
Lockheed Martin reported mixed first-quarter 2015 earnings Tuesday morning before markets opened.
The key now for investors wanting to stay long stocks is buying good value. These Deutsche Bank stock picks have defensive qualities and pay better than average dividends.
The Air Force needs to come up with a fleet of 350 new trainers at a time when the U.S. defense budget is under pressure both from lower appropriations and sequestration.
The Moody’s Investors Service outlook on the global aerospace and defense industry for the next year to 18 months is stable, but some factors could change that outlook to negative.
Worldwide military expenditure shrunk in 2013 for the second consecutive year, falling by 1.9% to $1.75 trillion. The 100 largest arms-producers sold a combined $402 billion worth of arms and...