Global problems in the supply chain are impacting the defense industrial base and two of its largest members reported their third quarter financial results to investors Tuesday that illuminate those exact headwinds.
Amentum in year one of its relaunch as a standalone company went out and acquired DynCorp International. Now in year two, Amentum has set its sights on a second major transaction and this time it's buying PAE.
The State Department's industry day for this multiple-award, $8 billion IT services contract is just around the corner and the agency already has an idea of how it wants to divide up the work.
Lockheed Martin's board of directors elects a former AT&T CEO to be the panel's latest member. That means Lockheed looked to the very sector it wants to work with on achieving the company's vision for networked platforms and systems.
Blue Delta Capital Partners, the venture investment firm focused on government technology companies, adds former Perspecta CEO Mac Curtis as a venture fellow and he fills us in on what that entails.
Just about everything in the world runs on computer chips and the world keeps wanting more of these items including government contractors to make complex technology systems for customers. Here we try to understand what the global chip shortage means for the public sector ecosystem.
This week saw the two largest aerospace companies in the world and another pair of emerging technology firms announce appointments to their senior leadership teams, including a promotion to the top from within.
Vertex Aerospace has at various points been a standalone company, a business unit within another large defense market player, and more recently back to being a standalone company. Its CEO explains to us what is next for Vertex after the acquisition of a large Raytheon services businesses.
The private equity firm whose most recent high-profile exits include DynCorp International and Sparton Corp. acquires a contractor focused on enterprise IT and telecommunications services for agencies.
Speaking of Leidos as the largest government technology and services company is true. But its latest in-depth outlook for investors to consider also has numbers that show how much more market share they have confidence in grabbing some of.
After multiple awards and rounds of protests, Amentum can now tout itself as the winner of and start to work on a nearly $1.3 billion aircraft maintenance contract with the Customs and Border Protection agency.
Booz Allen Hamilton has given investors a new acronym, "VoLT," to show where the government technology and services firm wants to go and how its new plan builds on the foundation laid by its success with its Vision 2020 strategy.
Thanks to its Perspecta acquisition, Peraton can tout itself as the winner of a much-anticipated $2.7 billion cloud computing migration contract with the Homeland Security Department.
Peraton is parting ways with its systems engineering unit, which is being acquired by an arm of the company's private equity owner focused on the government market's middle tier.
Peraton's activity in the realm of mergers and acquisitions is far from the only events to run through here as four other deals hit my inbox while I was on a two-week brain break.
Cognosante wins a potential $545 million task order for supply chain management and technology integration services to the Veterans Affairs Department.