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Lockheed Martin Stock (LMT) Today: Pentagon Contract Boosts, F‑35 Scrutiny, and Analyst Targets Ahead of Monday’s Open
27 December 2025
5 mins read

Lockheed Martin Stock (LMT) Today: Pentagon Contract Boosts, F‑35 Scrutiny, and Analyst Targets Ahead of Monday’s Open

NEW YORK (as of 1:20 a.m. ET, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025) — U.S. stock markets are closed for the weekend, which means Lockheed Martin Corporation (NYSE: LMT) investors are heading into Monday’s session with a familiar year-end setup: thin liquidity, headline risk, and lots of “what changes by Monday morning?” energy. New York Stock Exchange+1

Lockheed Martin stock last traded around $483.03, down about 0.56% in the most recent session (Friday, Dec. 26).

The broader market backdrop: quiet post-holiday tape, but near record highs

Friday’s trading was classic post-Christmas “low drama, low volume,” with the Dow down 0.04%, S&P 500 down 0.03%, and Nasdaq down 0.09%, according to Reuters. Carson Group chief market strategist Ryan Detrick described the market as essentially “catching our breath” after a strong run and noted that the seasonal “Santa Claus rally” window runs into early January. Reuters+1

Looking into next week, Reuters reports the S&P 500 is within roughly 1% of 7,000, with investors watching upcoming catalysts including Fed policy signals (notably the minutes from the Fed’s December meeting) as 2025 winds down.

For LMT shareholders, this matters because defense primes often trade like a hybrid of:

  • “cash-flow + dividend” stability, and
  • headline-driven defense/geopolitical exposure
    …which can get amplified when the market is quiet and headlines are loud.

Where Lockheed Martin stands right now

At around $483, Lockheed is sitting in the “big-cap defense core holding” zone: it’s not a meme-stock rocket ship, and it’s not supposed to be. What most investors watch is whether the company can keep delivering predictable earnings, cash flow, and shareholder returns while navigating program execution risks.

A quick valuation snapshot (based on company guidance)

Lockheed’s raised 2025 profit outlook (EPS guidance $22.15 to $22.35) implies a forward P/E around ~21.6–21.8 at the current price, using the midpoint of guidance.

That valuation is not a full thesis by itself—but it helps frame why analysts can disagree sharply even while looking at the same company.

The biggest LMT-specific news moving the narrative right now

1) Pentagon boosts a Lockheed aircraft contract by $10 billion

One of the most investor-friendly headlines this week: Reuters reported the Pentagon increased a previously awarded Lockheed contract tied to C‑130J aircraft delivery, development, and engineering by $10 billion, bringing the total to $25 billion. The work supports sales to multiple international partners (Foreign Military Sales), which can be attractive because it often extends production lines and backlog visibility.

Why it matters for the stock: this is the kind of contract update that reinforces the “backlog machine” thesis—steady demand, multi-year timelines, and defense customers that don’t vanish overnight.

2) Space is staying hot: SDA Tranche 3 Tracking Layer awards

Lockheed also landed a meaningful space win tied to the Space Development Agency (SDA). Lockheed’s own release says it was awarded a contract for 18 Tranche 3 Tracking Layer space vehicles, with a potential value of more than $1 billion, supporting missile tracking in low Earth orbit.

Zooming out, Reuters reported SDA awarded $3.5 billion total across Lockheed Martin, L3Harris, Northrop Grumman, and Rocket Lab, with each building 18 satellites under fixed-price contracts.

Why it matters: “proliferated LEO” missile tracking is turning into a multi-year capex-and-contract cycle. Investors often treat this as a structural tailwind—especially if Lockheed can execute on schedule and margins.

3) The uncomfortable headline risk: F‑35 sustainment and readiness criticism

Not all headlines are warm and fuzzy. Reuters reported a Pentagon watchdog review found F‑35s were available to fly only 50% of the time in 2024, below a minimum requirement of 67%, citing maintenance shortcomings and accountability gaps in sustainment contracting. Reuters also reported the watchdog said the Pentagon paid about $1.7 billion without an economic adjustment despite performance shortfalls.

Why investors care: the F‑35 is a crown-jewel program, but sustainment performance and contracting structures can affect future profitability, political scrutiny, and the “multiple” the market is willing to pay.

4) Financial momentum: Q3 results and raised 2025 outlook

Lockheed raised its 2025 outlook after Q3 results, with Reuters reporting EPS guidance increased to $22.15–$22.35 and the low end of sales outlook lifted to $74.25 billion (top end $74.75 billion).

The company also highlighted record backlog of $179 billion and strong cash generation in its Q3 release.

Why it matters: backlog + cash flow are the oxygen supply for dividends and buybacks. In defense, consistency is a feature, not a bug.

Dividend and shareholder return angle: still a core part of the bull case

Lockheed declared a $3.45 quarterly dividend, payable Dec. 30, 2025, to holders of record as of Dec. 1, 2025, and noted it marked the company’s 23rd consecutive year of dividend increases.

For investors who hold LMT as an “income + defense exposure” position, that dividend durability is often the main reason the stock stays on the watchlist even during choppy headlines.

Wall Street forecasts: targets cluster in the low-to-mid $500s, but conviction is mixed

Analyst target data varies by source and coverage universe, but the center of gravity is broadly in the low-to-mid $500s:

  • MarketWatch lists targets such as high $605, low $430, with an average around $527 and median near $530.
  • MarketBeat shows an average target around $506.67, with the stock carrying an overall “Hold”-type consensus. MarketBeat+1

Recent analyst actions investors are reacting to

  • JPMorgan: TipRanks reports analyst Seth Seifman downgraded Lockheed to Neutral from Overweight, raising the price target to $515 (from $465), citing concerns that JPMorgan’s out-year cash-flow estimates are below consensus.
  • Morgan Stanley: Barron’s reports analyst Kristine Liwag cut the rating from Buy to Hold and lowered the price target to $543 (from $630), pointing to slower earnings growth and concentration risk around the F‑35 program.

A bullish sector view (but not universally bullish on LMT)

Business Insider highlighted Scott Helfstein, SVP of investment strategy at Global X ETFs, arguing defense stocks could remain strong into 2026 and listing Lockheed among his picks—while also noting LMT’s 2025 performance lagged parts of the broader defense trade.

On the other side of the sentiment spectrum, some commentary has emphasized concerns such as margin pressure, growth constraints, and the possibility of greater scrutiny around capital returns.

What investors should know before the next market session

Because it’s Saturday in New York and the NYSE is closed, the next real price discovery for LMT happens when markets reopen Monday, Dec. 29 (standard hours).

Between now and Monday’s open, the “checklist” for LMT holders is mostly about headline filtration:

Watchlist item 1: Weekend geopolitical headlines

Defense stocks can gap up/down on weekend developments. This week’s tape already showed how geopolitics can hover over the sector narrative (even when immediate business impact is limited).

Watchlist item 2: Program execution headlines (F‑35 sustainment, delivery pace, contract terms)

After the watchdog report, any follow-on commentary—from the Pentagon, congressional voices, or contract-structure updates—could move sentiment, even if fundamentals don’t change overnight.

Watchlist item 3: Rate expectations and Fed communication

Reuters flags that investors are watching for the Fed’s December meeting minutes next week, and interest-rate expectations remain a market-wide driver as 2026 approaches.

Watchlist item 4: Next-week economic calendar is light, but not empty

MarketWatch’s calendar shows Pending Home Sales (Nov.) scheduled for 10:00 a.m. ET Monday—not usually a “defense stock” catalyst, but anything that moves rates can ripple through equity valuations. MarketWatch

The next big LMT catalyst on the calendar: earnings season (late January)

Nasdaq and Zacks both show Lockheed’s next earnings report is estimated around Jan. 27, 2026 (date not always confirmed until the company announces).

That earnings print is likely to refocus the conversation on:

  • 2026 guidance and cash-flow outlook
  • F‑35 production and sustainment economics
  • Space execution and margins
  • Buybacks/dividend capacity in a higher-scrutiny environment

Bottom line for LMT stock heading into Monday

Lockheed enters the next session with real contract-tailwind headlines (C‑130J and SDA Tracking Layer), a durable capital-return story (dividend growth), and a credible backlog/cash-flow foundation—but also with execution and sustainment scrutiny (F‑35 readiness) and fresh analyst caution on longer-term cash-flow trajectory.

That’s basically the Lockheed investor experience in one sentence: a steady ship sailing through noisy weather.

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