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Lockheed Martin (LMT) Stock: Dec. 17, 2025 News, Forecasts and Analysis as NDAA Advances and Buyback Curbs Loom
17 December 2025
6 mins read

Lockheed Martin (LMT) Stock: Dec. 17, 2025 News, Forecasts and Analysis as NDAA Advances and Buyback Curbs Loom

Lockheed Martin Corporation (NYSE: LMT) stock traded lower on Wednesday, December 17, as investors weighed a rare mix of “big-picture” Washington headlines and company-specific program momentum. In late trading (as of 20:07 UTC), Lockheed Martin shares were at $472.91, down $4.15 (-0.87%) on the day after swinging between $462.66 and $476.89.

While defense primes often move on contract wins and quarterly numbers, today’s tone was set by three catalysts: a fresh Wall Street downgrade, reports that the White House may try to rein in shareholder payouts at major contractors, and Congress moving a massive defense policy bill toward the President’s desk.

Why Lockheed Martin stock is moving today

1) Morgan Stanley downgrade ends the “quiet rally” narrative

Lockheed Martin had just logged a notable winning streak in recent sessions, but sentiment shifted after Morgan Stanley downgraded LMT to Equal Weight (Hold) from Overweight, cutting its price target to $543 from $630.

The downgrade mattered not only for the rating change but because it reinforced a debate that has followed LMT through 2025: Lockheed’s stability and cash-generation versus concerns that its expected earnings growth is slower than peers—and that the company is heavily exposed to the F‑35, which contributes roughly a quarter of revenue.

Morgan Stanley’s note, as described by market coverage, pointed to multiple pressures behind the reset, including cash-flow headwinds tied to pensions and F‑35 program risks (including discussion around FY2026 unit requests and overseas demand).

2) White House weighs restrictions on dividends and buybacks for defense primes

The most market-sensitive headline for the entire sector today came from reports that the Trump administration is preparing an executive order that would limit dividends, share buybacks, and executive pay for defense contractors whose projects are over budget and delayed, according to sources briefed on the proposal.

Two details are crucial for investors trying to handicap the potential impact:

  • It is not yet official, and a White House official cautioned that, until announced, discussion is “purely speculation.” Reuters
  • Reuters reported it was unclear how the order would compel companies to implement restrictions, and the language could still change.

Even the possibility of curbs can move a stock like LMT because Lockheed is widely owned for its shareholder-return profile—and because it’s tied to marquee programs that can become lightning rods for scrutiny over cost and schedule.

3) Congress passes the FY2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)

At the same time, the policy backdrop for defense spending remains constructive. The U.S. Senate passed the fiscal 2026 NDAA, described by Reuters as a nearly $1 trillion defense policy bill that Congress has passed for 65 straight years, sending it to the White House where the administration has said President Trump will sign it.

For Lockheed Martin investors, the NDAA matters less as a single “LMT line item” and more as a signal of continued strategic demand across missile defense, munitions, and allied support—areas where Lockheed has deep exposure. The bill includes provisions such as Ukraine assistance funding, Taiwan security cooperation funding, and continued emphasis on missile defense cooperation (including support for Israel’s cooperative missile defense programs). Reuters

The shareholder-return question: Why buyback and dividend headlines hit LMT harder than most

Lockheed Martin has long been viewed as a “defense income” name: steady cash flows, a reliable dividend, and opportunistic repurchases. That’s why today’s executive-order chatter landed with force.

In October, Lockheed’s board authorized a $3.45 per share quarterly dividend—a 5% increase—marking the company’s 23rd consecutive year of dividend increases. The board also approved up to an additional $2 billion in share repurchases, bringing total remaining repurchase authorization to about $9.1 billion.

Reuters explicitly cited Lockheed’s dividend and buyback authorization as examples of the sector’s normal shareholder payout model—precisely the behavior an executive order could try to redirect toward production capacity, schedule performance, or capital investment.

What investors are watching next: whether any final policy language targets (a) all primes broadly, (b) only contractors tied to specific delayed/over-budget programs, or (c) only certain categories of Pentagon work. The market impact would likely differ significantly across those scenarios.

Company news on Dec. 17: Hungary rocket artillery cooperation adds European momentum

Against the Washington noise, Lockheed also put out a notable operational headline today: Lockheed Martin and 4iG Space and Defence Technologies signed a memorandum of understanding to collaborate on a Hungarian-specific long-range rocket artillery system capability, intended for integration in Hungary.

Under the agreement, the companies will explore a framework to support local integration of Lockheed Martin’s artillery rocket system launcher loader module (LLM) on Hungarian military trucks.

Lockheed also highlighted interoperability and flexibility: the LLM can be armed with ATACMS, PrSM, Standard-Range GMLRS, or Extended-Range GMLRS missiles, and it is designed for interoperability with fielded M270A2 and HIMARS launchers—an angle that fits Europe’s broader push for compatible long-range fires across NATO forces.

For LMT stock watchers, the immediate question isn’t whether an MoU instantly changes near-term earnings, but whether it strengthens Lockheed’s positioning in Europe’s multi-year rearmament cycle—particularly in precision fires and missile systems.

F-35 headlines: Finland celebrates first jet rollout, Switzerland trims its order

Lockheed’s F‑35 remains both a core franchise and a market sensitivity point—because it’s large, visible, and often debated by policymakers and analysts.

Finland: first F‑35A rolls out, deliveries begin in 2026

Lockheed Martin announced that government and military leaders from the U.S. and Finland celebrated the rollout of Finland’s first F‑35A at Lockheed’s Fort Worth production facility. The company said the first aircraft will be delivered in early 2026, and Finland’s program of record calls for 64 F‑35As.

This is a positive “demand confirmation” headline—reinforcing that major European orders are moving from contract phase into physical deliveries and long-tail sustainment.

Switzerland: order reduction underscores cost sensitivity

But the demand story is not uniform. Last week, Switzerland said it will reduce the number of F‑35A jets it buys to stay within its approved budget, after costs rose.

That contrast helps explain why some analysts remain cautious about Lockheed’s growth profile even as the broader defense budget outlook improves.

LMT stock forecast: analyst price targets, ratings, and earnings expectations

Wall Street consensus: “Hold,” with targets clustering in the low-to-mid $500s

Across widely followed market data providers, Lockheed Martin’s consensus rating remains Hold. One set of MarketWatch estimates lists an average target price of $527.89 across 24 ratings, while another widely cited analyst summary lists an average target of about $512.

Price targets still show meaningful dispersion—Zacks lists a low of $430 and a high of $630—reflecting the market’s split view between “cash-flow compounder” and “growth-constrained prime.” Zacks

Morgan Stanley’s $543 target: not bearish, but a re-rating call

Importantly, Morgan Stanley’s $543 target is not a “breakdown” call; it is a valuation and growth call—effectively arguing that, relative to peers, the stock’s risk-reward is now more balanced at current levels. TipRanks+1

Zacks/earnings modeling: small trims, but investors are looking past the next quarter

One fresh estimate update circulating today: MarketBeat reported Zacks Research trimmed its Q1 2026 EPS estimate to $6.93 from $6.98 and published a FY2027 EPS figure, while noting a separate consensus full-year estimate.

Whether investors react to those incremental tweaks often depends on the broader narrative—especially around defense budgets, procurement reform, and capital return policy (all front and center today).

The next major catalyst: earnings date on the calendar

According to Zacks’ earnings calendar, Lockheed Martin is expected to report its next quarterly results around January 27, 2026 (based on historical patterns).

For LMT stock, earnings calls typically matter less for “beat or miss” and more for updates on:

  • 2026 demand pacing and contract timing
  • Free cash flow and pension dynamics
  • Any changes in capital return plans (especially if Washington pressures mount)

Fundamentals check: guidance, cash generation, and the 2026 debate

Lockheed raised its 2025 outlook after third-quarter results, citing robust demand. Reuters reported the company lifted its 2025 profit outlook to $22.15–$22.35 per share, and raised the low end of its sales outlook to $74.25 billion (maintaining the high end at $74.75 billion).

That guidance backdrop helps explain why many investors still treat drawdowns as potential “defensive entry points”—yet the market is also signaling it wants clearer evidence of durable growth beyond the current cycle and fewer headline risks around program execution and politics.

Key takeaways for investors watching Lockheed Martin stock today

Lockheed Martin’s December 17 tape is being pulled by forces bigger than any single contract:

  • Near-term pressure: A high-profile downgrade plus uncertainty around a potential executive order targeting buybacks/dividends—a key part of the LMT investment case.
  • Medium-term support: The FY2026 NDAA moving forward reinforces a strong defense policy baseline, including allied support and missile defense priorities.
  • Company momentum: New international cooperation headlines in long-range fires (Hungary) and program progress (Finland’s first F‑35A rollout) underscore ongoing allied demand.
  • The market’s “base case” forecast: Consensus remains Hold, with many targets concentrated around the low-to-mid $500s, but with wide dispersion that reflects real disagreement about growth, execution, and policy risk. MarketWatch+1

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