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Defense Industry Faces Profit Losses As Golden Decade Ends

Defense Industry Profits

First Posted: 08/15/11 05:52 PM ET Updated: 10/15/11 06:12 AM ET

NEW YORK (AP) -- The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are winding down, Osama bin Laden is dead, and the federal government is deeply in debt. This spells the end of what was a golden decade for the defense industry.

In the decade since the Sept. 11 attacks, the annual defense budget has more than doubled to $700 billion and annual defense industry profits have nearly quadrupled, approaching $25 billion last year.

Now defense spending is poised to retreat, and so are industry profits. "We're about to go into the downhill side of the roller coaster here," said David Berteau, a defense industry analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Congress agreed last month to cut military spending by $350 billion over the next 10 years. The defense budget will automatically be cut by another $500 billion over that period if lawmakers fail to reach a deficit-cutting deal by November.

Defense industry stocks have already begun to suffer; they are lagging the S&P 500 in recent months. During the last defense spending downturn, which lasted from 1985 to 1997, defense stocks underperformed the broader market by 33 percent, according to an analysis by RBC Capital Markets.

The Sept. 11 attacks forced the world's biggest and best-funded military to quickly retool itself. It needed to develop technologies, weapons and strategies to find and fight an elusive network of terrorists that seemed more sophisticated and dangerous than ever imagined.

The U.S. spent $1.3 trillion in the ten years following the attacks chasing al-Qaida and fighting two wars. That was on top of baseline military spending in excess of $4 trillion.

"After 9/11 the floodgates opened," says Eric Hugel, a defense industry analyst at Stephens Inc.

The defense budget grew from $316 billion in 2001 to $708 billion in 2011. Federal spending on homeland security, which includes everything from airport security to border control, also rose dramatically. Last year dozens of federal agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, spent $70 billion on such programs, according to the Office of Management and Budget. That's up from $37 billion in 2003, the first year after DHS was formed.

All that spending was reflected in the soaring performance of the defense industry, led by the top five defense contractors: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics and Raytheon.

In 2001, revenues for U.S.-based defense contractors totaled $217 billion, according to data compiled by the analytics firm Capital IQ. By 2010 revenues had grown to $386 billion. Profits grew more than twice as fast over the same time period, from $6.7 billion to $24.8 billion. Contractors based abroad, such as BAE Systems, also flourished. BAE was the sixth biggest defense contractor in 2010, with $7.2 billion in U.S. military contracts.

Stock prices of defense companies in the S&P 500 index have risen 67 percent since September 11. The index as a whole climbed 8 percent in that period.

Military spending typically rises during wartime and falls during peacetime. But after Sept. 11, and as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan evolved, it became clear the country needed to spend money on very different military technologies and strategies.

Fighter jets, missile defenses and other Cold War-era systems designed to deal with the perceived threats of nation-states were less useful. The U.S. military had to increase its ability to find, recognize and track enemies that were scattered in many countries and dispersed among the civilian population.

During the war in Iraq the military realized that it couldn't protect troops from a low-tech, but potent threat: jerry-rigged road side bombs. In Afghanistan, commanders needed ways to find and root out insurgents that had tucked themselves in caves in hard-to-reach mountains.

These challenges led to new hardware. Among the most important:

_ Transport trucks that protect troops and supplies from roadside bombs. Mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles, or MRAPs, quickly became crucial equipment for the Army. Oshkosh Corp., a maker of these trucks, was the 9th biggest military contractor last year. Before 9/11, it wasn't in the top 20.

_ Identification tools. Soldiers now carry small portable devices that identify a person by scanning fingerprints, irises and faces. These devices, made by L-1 Identity Solutions, which was recently acquired by Safran, can weigh as little as 3 pounds, transmit data by several different wireless methods and remember 1 million identities.

_ Unmanned aircraft. General Atomics' Predators, drones that can fire missiles, have killed several al-Qaida commanders. Lockheed Martin's RQ-170 Sentinel reportedly kept watch on Osama bin Laden's compound as the raid that killed him was taking place.

Another type of company surged in importance in the last decade: Companies that provide services and support to military operations.

As of March, the Defense Department had more contractor personnel in Afghanistan in Iraq than uniformed personnel, according to a study by the Congressional Research Service. Afghanistan has the highest ratio of contractors to military personnel than any other U.S. war.

This has boosted companies like KBR, once a division of Halliburton. KBR, which builds and maintains military bases and other facilities, had $4.7 billion in military contracts in 2010, up from $860 million a decade earlier.

Analysts say the heavy reliance on contractors should allow the military to wind down spending more quickly, because it is easier to terminate a contract than to reduce uniformed troop levels. Also, the government isn't responsible for pensions, health care and other benefits for contract workers, which should save money.

Equipment spending is already being scaled back. In 2009, funding for the F-22 fighter jet, a $65 billion program, was discontinued. Spending on the F-35 fighter jet is in danger of being cut back. An advanced warship called the DDG1000 has been canceled, and an upgrade to the Bradley tank called the Ground Combat Vehicle may also be scaled back or canceled.

Over the past six months, defense company stocks in the S&P 500 index have fallen 16 percent. That compares with an 11 percent decline for the entire index.

During wartime, when dollars are flowing, the new equipment developed to battle new enemies is used together with the equipment that had been developed for earlier wars. But as budgets shrink this time, some of the technologies that were developed during the past decade, such as the unmanned aircraft, will have to replace older systems entirely.

"The era of manned airplanes should be seen as over," says Michael O'Hanlon, a defense policy expert at the Brookings Institution. "The problem is nobody wants to give up the previously agreed on platform."

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NEW YORK (AP) -- The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are winding down, Osama bin Laden is dead, and the federal government is deeply in debt. This spells the end of what was a golden decade for the defen...
NEW YORK (AP) -- The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are winding down, Osama bin Laden is dead, and the federal government is deeply in debt. This spells the end of what was a golden decade for the defen...
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02:36 PM on 09/09/2011
It was about time
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolyn Kostopoulos
08:12 AM on 08/17/2011
there are two things very wrong with this headline: the use of the words "industry" and "profits." defense, like medical care should never be a for-profit industry; the need for increasing profits leads to war, leads to a view of war as a business venture. it's not. real people die, real countries are destroyed. we are in Iraq and Afghanistan for two reasons- american oil companies want control of their oil fields and american companies want their territories opened up for new markets- imagine the starbucks and wal-mats that could be built their if those people could be forced to abandon their own cultures and take up western patterns of consumption.
the fact that the deaths of american soldiers and the native population are mere figures in the business plan, that american tax dollars are used in this profit making endeavor (the american people of course will never see a return on their "investment") is deplorable.
this would all end if young men and women simply stopped volunteering to go. hence the massive propaganda to convince them that this has something to do with patriotism and defense of the homeland. massive unemployment ties in nicely, giving many young people nothing else to do
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
07:41 AM on 08/17/2011
Europe can afford a single payer healthcare system because they spend nothing on defense. We provide defense to most countries since WW2.

If we took care of our own and let these countries provide their own defense, we also could afford a HC system for our own.

Its time the MACHINE is put out of service and tell contractors like XE to take a hike.

Why do WE police the entire world when we cant even afford to create jobs on our soil? Industrial War Complex industry must end. Werent we warned about this and chose to ignore it?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolyn Kostopoulos
08:17 AM on 08/17/2011
actually european countries do spend something on their own defense. they simply spend an appropriate amount for countries not at war. no one is asking us to police the world. the US outspends every other nation combined (!) and justifies it by creating fictitious "enemies" meanwhile earning the hatred of the world.
other countries can afford health care (and education and retirement and vacations) not because they let us pay for defense that they don't need, but because they have taken the profit motive out of those things. they are public goods and therefore no one is allowed to make a killing off them
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gts31bumbee
a Warehouse of Information
10:59 AM on 08/17/2011
Yes, I believe IKE took a strong stand on this issue and he was correct. He was not one of my favorites, but most presidents we will find had some redeeming acts;
although with some we have to dig quite deep like "W".
Our problem is we cannot afford "guns and butter " any longer. Until the wealthy Repugs wake up to that fact the middle class will have to bleed a while first. Good post....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Lamoreaux
03:55 AM on 08/17/2011
We should just outsource it all. No need to keep these low skill jobs in the U.S. What's the point in trying to build our own Fifth-Gen fighter. We'd only use it and sell it, and make tons of money. That seems pretty pointless. We can just buy a Chengdu from China or a Sukhoi from Russia. Or if they're too expensive, there's the Hundai version being built by South Korea and Indonesia. Might be cheaper, and I hear they give a year's free gas. Better yet, let's just get out of the flying business altogether. It's dangerous. And expensive. We could maybe hire some nice H1B pilots from Saudi Arabia, and just subcontract everything. It's just so nice that we never gotta worry about war ever again. Time for our peace dividend. Momma needs a new flatscreen.
06:56 PM on 08/16/2011
New hardware should only be addressed if it is more efficient and reliable and addresses our current threats. Shut down the "Cold War Machine" designed to fight enemies we don't have. Put all new hardware contracts through an actual competitive bidding process, make them compete. No bid=no contract. Get rid of "services" contracts completely. If you need security, put a soldier on post. If you need something built, then have the Corps of Engineers design it and get the CBs to build it. We have good soldiers, use them. Stop paying companies to do what our soldiers are trained to do.
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gts31bumbee
a Warehouse of Information
04:57 PM on 08/16/2011
Dramatic cuts in defense will put a quick end to any republican aspirations and a certain end to top heavy defense spending Texas as well. They will become the new welfare state and will replace the old welfare state; TEXAS. Only difference is the old Texas was bloated with government contracts and has been living high on corporate welfare. Add in the oil subsidies and you can see how they have done so well at our expense. Do you think the tea Bagger's and the nouveau riche Wall St. wizards will set Texas adrift... Stay tuned..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dragonlady620
My karma will run over your dogma
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chuckgoodcat
retired / disabled
04:32 PM on 08/16/2011
Don't confuse two problems as if they are one .
Government spending and debt did not cause this recession .
The government has taken on a lot of new debt trying to end the recession that was born in the private sector in early 2008 and led to the stock market crash of Oct 2008 and the big bank bailout program that angered everyone in the country .
The tea party is delibertley trying to use the accumulated debt of fifty years and the pain and anger over the bailout and of economic recession as one issue turning them into a weapon to defeat a president they have been lying about for four solid years .
This president did not cause this recession or high unemploymet . Wall Street and the bankers have done that .
What this president has spent in economic stimulus has been an attempt to revive a dying economy he had no hand in harming .
There are liars and there are damned liars the tea party are damned liars
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dragonlady620
My karma will run over your dogma
06:35 PM on 08/16/2011
I don't think that all the Tea Partiers are liars- just pitifully ignorant and seemingly unwilling to take the trouble to really understand the issues. If they would bother to find out just what they're protesting they would realize that they're shooting themselves in the foot.
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gts31bumbee
a Warehouse of Information
10:47 AM on 08/17/2011
Peddle to the metal dragonlady620. You done good ! Repeat as necessary. G
06:49 PM on 08/16/2011
I think that the real cause of this recession is the stratification of wealth that started way back in the Reagan era. The experiment in Supply Side economics is over and the results are in. It doesn't work! See http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/07/inequality-dampening-economic-recover/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheBigPicture+%28The+Big+Picture%29&utm_content=Google+Feedfetcher
04:28 PM on 08/16/2011
Great news for the country...
We don't need cool fire-jets to fight non-sense wars.
We have more fire-jets than the whole Word combined, and we can't win a war in a country who doesn't have one single fire-jet.
America should learn something from the Soviet Union, Military super power is a thing of the past (imperial age) and a failed policy in the 21st Century.
Reducing our military it's not a sign of weakness, but a smart move.
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DMAvery
04:17 PM on 08/16/2011
don't worry defense industry. i'm sure the next time we have a Republican president that he'll find a reason to start a war that will bring you billions in profits from our blood and guts. they always do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dragonlady620
My karma will run over your dogma
03:46 PM on 08/16/2011
Interesting bit of history: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gg-jvHynP9Y
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tarpon22
03:04 PM on 08/16/2011
Look at the faces of the crooks in this picture.
These are just a few of the crooks stealing Tax Payer Money in back door War deals.

The War and fear mongoring is coming to an end.
Then we can start to go after these War Companies for Fraud and theft.

Ron Paul 2012
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Republicanistan
Ignorance is Strength in Baggerstan
02:48 PM on 08/16/2011
War is Peace
Nuclear is Safe
Conservatives are Compassionate
Ignorance is Strength
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herkyc130
telling the truth and pulling the blinders off
05:40 PM on 08/16/2011
THE BOOK 1984 ITS ALL TRUE, THE CORPORATE GOP politicians will turn the USA INTO A POLICE STATE
02:35 PM on 08/16/2011
And now we all know why it was SO VERY IMPORTANT for us to MILITARY $$ in Iraq...

Because every REPUGNICAN "President" (thief) "MUST SAVE DEMOCRACY", we're constantly at war with someone, ANYONE, to keep that defense budget astronomically high.

When did the US Military become PROFITEERS? Sounds like a new/old revenue stream...
09:06 PM on 08/16/2011
Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower (a former 5-star General of The Army, and Supreme Allied Commander of WWII) warned us of this as he left office many decades ago.
02:02 PM on 08/16/2011
what do they mean golden decade? wasn't the cold war enough of a golden era? we threw all the money we could at these companies to win WW2 and when we did win these same companies (several of which collaborated with the nazis before the war) decided that they hadn't gotten enough money so they created ridiculous projects to throw money into (like MK-ULTRA) under the guise of "national security"; when the cold war ended defense contractors had to prove that their products were useful because of reduced defense spending, then when 9/11 happened it was a nearly blank check for the government to spend on pet projects that serve little or no useful purpose, further putting lives at risk; it is high time that we stop letting the companies that manufacture the weapons tell the military what kind of tech they need, the military is much too close to its contractors, case in point: blackwater.
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02:26 PM on 08/16/2011
I more or less agree with your comment.

Most Americans probably do not know that prior to WWII, there was no "defense industry" in the US. Our "war machine" was manufactured by GM, Ford, Chrysler, DuPont, et al.

We had no need for a "war machine" until after WWII and the war was over.

Now, it appears our "war machine" has targeted our economy.
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dragonlady620
My karma will run over your dogma
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gts31bumbee
a Warehouse of Information
05:01 PM on 08/16/2011
Thank You; repeat as necessary- why should we continue to support them and those pimps in Congress ?
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
01:58 PM on 08/16/2011
yes the golden age of Greed

has come to a screeching halt !

so much suffering it has left it in ,s wake !