Here's Lockheed Martin's Next Big Growth Opportunity

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Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) has been a highflier among defense stocks in recent quarters, fueled on by an impressive portfolio headlined by the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The company's latest quarter continued the positive trend, with Lockheed easily beating estimates and raising guidance for the full year.

The outperformance in recent years has been driven by the slow and steady ramp-up of the F-35, potentially a trillion-dollar program, as well as the U.S. government's hunger to replenish its missile stocks and update missile defenses. Those trends are going to take time to play out and should provide Lockheed Martin a boost for the next few years.

LMT Chart
LMT Chart

Defense stock gains data by YCharts.

Lockheed Martin's second quarter provided a clear indication that the bull case for the stock is intact, while also hinting where new growth, and the potential for continued outperformance, will come from. Here's a look at the quarter, and what management has to say about Lockheed Martin's long-term prospects.

Revenue up across the board

Lockheed Martin earned $5 per share in the second quarter on revenue of $14.4 billion, easily surpassing analyst expectations for $4.77 per share in earnings on sales of $14.2 billion. It's the second straight quarterly beat in 2019.

The rest of the year looks good as well. Lockheed hiked its full-year guidance for the second time, now saying it expects $20.85 to $21.15 per share in earnings on sales of $58.25 billion to $59.75 billion. The company expects to generate operating cash of $7.6 billion for the year, up from previous guidance of at least $7.5 billion.

Analysts were expecting $20.60 per share in earnings on $58.05 billion in revenue.

Lockheed Martin grew sales by nearly 8% year over year, led by 15.6% growth in missiles and fire control, 11% growth from space, and single-digit gains from rotary and aeronautics. The company was also a cash generating machine in the quarter, boasting a cash conversion rate -- a measure of a company's ability to convert earnings into free cash flow -- of 120% in the period.

Net Sales by Division

Q2 2019

Q2 2018

Aeronautics

$5.55 billion

$5.32 billion

Missiles and fire control

$2.41 billion

$2.09 billion

Rotary and mission systems

$3.77 billion

$3.57 billion

Space

$2.70 billion

$2.43 billion

Data source: Lockheed Martin.

Things weren't all rosy for Lockheed Martin. The company is scrambling to find alternate supply sources for F-35 components following the U.S. government's decision to remove Turkey from the fighter program, a process that could take until early 2020 to complete. Lockheed Martin CEO Marillyn Hewson in a post-earnings call with investors said the resourcing effort is "a pretty fluid situation," but one the company had been preparing for.