Today: 20 May 2026
Booz Allen stock drops nearly 10% after U.S. Treasury cancels all contracts in data-leak fallout
26 January 2026
2 mins read

Booz Allen stock drops nearly 10% after U.S. Treasury cancels all contracts in data-leak fallout

NEW YORK, Jan 26, 2026, 13:41 EST — Regular session

  • Booz Allen Hamilton shares dropped roughly 10% following the U.S. Treasury’s announcement that it had terminated all contracts with the company.
  • The Treasury pointed to insufficient protections for sensitive taxpayer information and highlighted the IRS leak linked to former contractor Charles Littlejohn.
  • Investors are eyeing potential spillover effects on other agencies as well as the Federal Reserve’s policy decision set for this week.

Booz Allen Hamilton (BAH) shares dropped 9.8% to $92.26 Monday afternoon following the U.S. Treasury Department’s announcement that it had canceled all contracts with the government consulting firm. The move sparked renewed worries over the company’s federal work prospects.

The dollar amount isn’t huge by itself. The real story is the signal. Booz Allen earns the bulk of its revenue from U.S. government agencies, so any public split with a cabinet department hits more than just a single client.

The Treasury described the action as a reaction to lapses in data protection, spotlighting controls over sensitive taxpayer information. Such problems can shadow contractors in future bids, making quick assessment difficult.

The Treasury announced it has terminated 31 contracts with Booz Allen, cutting $4.8 million in annual spending and $21 million in total obligations—the funds allocated under those agreements. “Canceling these contracts is an essential step to increasing Americans’ trust in government,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement. https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-relea…

The department highlighted Charles Edward Littlejohn, a former Booz Allen employee and IRS contractor who stole and leaked confidential tax return data. The Treasury said the IRS estimates around 406,000 taxpayers were impacted. Littlejohn was sentenced to five years in prison in 2024.

Booz Allen leans heavily on federal clients, a rarity among U.S.-listed consultancies. The company reported that government agencies made up 98% of its fiscal 2025 revenue, totaling roughly $11.98 billion.

The stock fell to a session low of $89.39 after starting around $103, then clawed back some ground. Booz Allen hadn’t responded to requests for comment in public reports as of Monday.

Shares in other government services and IT contractors dipped, but not uniformly: Leidos (LDOS) slid 1.3%, CACI (CACI) dropped 4.1%, and SAIC (SAIC) took a sharper hit, down 5.6%.

There’s a clear “but” for investors: Treasury’s canceled contracts represent a small slice of Booz Allen’s annual revenue, and the firm’s work covers the Pentagon, intelligence agencies, and civil departments. The real risk lies in reputational damage or tighter scrutiny on data handling, which could push the fallout beyond just one agency.

The focus now shifts away from today’s $21 million headline number. The bigger question: will other agencies step up as Treasury did? And will Booz Allen reveal any ripple effects in its filings or client communications? Eyes are also set on the Federal Reserve’s Jan. 27–28 meeting, which could spark the market’s next major move.

Stock Market Today

  • Packaging Corp of America Shares Surge Above 200-Day Moving Average
    May 20, 2026, 5:24 PM EDT. Shares of Packaging Corp of America (PKG) climbed above their 200-day moving average of $212.11 on Wednesday, reaching $212.52. The stock rose approximately 4.5% during the trading session. PKG's 52-week trading range spans from a low of $184.76 to a high of $249.51, with the latest price at $212.50. The 200-day moving average is a key technical indicator used by investors to assess long-term price trends. This upward move may signal positive momentum for PKG shares in the near term.

Latest articles

e.l.f. Beauty’s Earnings Beat Has One Big Catch Wall Street Can’t Ignore

e.l.f. Beauty’s Earnings Beat Has One Big Catch Wall Street Can’t Ignore

20 May 2026
e.l.f. Beauty forecast fiscal 2027 sales and adjusted profit below Wall Street estimates, citing $15–$20 million in potential oil-related costs from the Iran war. Fourth-quarter net sales rose 35% to $449.3 million, beating expectations, but the company posted a $49.4 million net loss due to a $57.6 million charge tied to the Rhode acquisition. Shares rose after hours despite closing down 4.3% earlier.
Applied Digital Hits 1 GW, $31 Billion Bet Starts

Applied Digital Hits 1 GW, $31 Billion Bet Starts

20 May 2026
Applied Digital signed a 15-year, $7.5 billion lease with an unnamed U.S. hyperscaler for 300 megawatts at its new Polaris Forge 3 campus, raising its contracted baseline revenue to $31 billion. Shares jumped about 8% to $39.52 in after-hours trading. Initial operations at the 600-acre northern U.S. site are set for August 2027. Analysts remain cautious on valuation and construction risk.
Nvidia Raises AI Stakes Again, Eyes Turn to Thursday Stock Action

Nvidia Raises AI Stakes Again, Eyes Turn to Thursday Stock Action

20 May 2026
Nvidia reported record first-quarter revenue of $81.6 billion, up 85% from a year earlier, and forecast $91.0 billion for the second quarter. Shares closed at $223.47, up 1.3%, then slipped to $221.90 in extended trading. The company authorized an additional $80 billion in share buybacks and raised its dividend to 25 cents per share. Data Center revenue rose 92% to $75.2 billion.
Amazon stock price slips as AWS lands Nationwide deal and earnings loom
Previous Story

Amazon stock price slips as AWS lands Nationwide deal and earnings loom

Dow Jones today: Apple, Cisco lift the index as Fed decision and Big Tech earnings loom
Next Story

Dow Jones today: Apple, Cisco lift the index as Fed decision and Big Tech earnings loom

Go toTop