Here's What You Need to Know About America's New Defense Titan

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Harris Corp. (NYSE: HRS) and L3 Technologies (NYSE: LLL), two of the most underappreciated companies in the defense sector, are planning to come together in hopes of better competing against the much larger primes. There was a lot for investors to like about each of these companies prior to the deal. Post-merger, the new L3 Harris Technologies looks like it could be a winner.

On Oct. 14, Harris and L3 said they would combine in an all-stock deal that would create a $33.5 billion market cap defense electronics company with about $16 billion in pro forma annual revenue and EBIT of $2.4 billion. L3 CEO Chris Kubasik said the deal would move the two companies closer to becoming an "innovative non-traditional 6th Prime," though the company would still fall well short of industry leaders Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, and Boeing in terms of annual sales.

A graphic rendition of some of the radomes made by L-3 for naval customers.
A graphic rendition of some of the radomes made by L-3 for naval customers.

IMAGE SOURCE: L-3 TECHNOLOGIES.

Though Harris holders would own a slight majority of the shares in the combined company, the deal is structured as a merger of equals. Post-deal, the board would consist of six members from each side, and Harris CEO William Brown plans to stay in that role for two years before making way for Kubasik.

Can 1 + 1 = 2+?

The two companies are a lot alike, with each focused on military electronics and communications. Both have been pushing to increase the amount of business they do directly with the Pentagon instead of serving as a subcontractor, with Harris focused on battlefield management, aircraft communications, and increasing its classified space work and L3 making a range of sensors and night-vision equipment and developing unmanned vessels.

They both have customers adjacent to the military, with Harris perhaps best known for its Stingray cellphone trackers used by U.S. law enforcement and L3 the vendor behind the full-body scanners used for airport security.

The combined company would generate about 67% of revenue from prime contracts, with the rest from subcontractor work. The U.S. Air Force, the combination's largest customer, would account for just 26% of revenue, with international, U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, commercial work, and civil government agencies each accounting for more than 10%.

A chart showing the complementary nature of L-3 and Harris businesses serving different government areas.
A chart showing the complementary nature of L-3 and Harris businesses serving different government areas.

Image source: Harris/L3 joint presentation.

Harris' Brown said the deal "unlocks additional growth opportunities" by allowing the combination to offer more end-to-end solutions to a broader range of U.S. and international customers. It also creates the scale needed to pursue bigger opportunities and, hopefully, make combined operations more cost competitive, with the companies predicting at least $500 million in annual gross cost synergies.