Table of Contents :
• Stock Rating & Target Price
• Investment Thesis
• Fundamental Models Used
• Company Description
• Corporate Timeline
• Key Metrics (KPI ) and Recently Reported Earnings Review
• Business Highlights, Strategic Announcements & Outlook
• Quarter-over-Quarter (Q-o-Q) and Year-over-Year (Y-o-Y) Growth Analysis
• Key Catalysts Driving Growth
• Historical Financial Statement Analysis & CAGR Trends
• Quarterly Key Financial Ratios and Performance Metrics
• Annual Financial Performance Analysis: Horizontal and Vertical Financial Analysis, Trends
• Financial Forecasts
• Annual Forecasts: Income Statement
• Annual Forecasts: Cash Flow Statements
• Net Debt Levels
• A Closer Look at DCF: Our Assumptions and Methodology
• Terminal Value Calculation
• Target Price Analysis
• Valuation Multiples
• Supplementary Valuation Analysis: Multiples Approach
• Scenario/Sensitivity Analysis – Base Case , Bull Case ,Bear Case
• Holistic Peer Review & Trading Comps: Financial Data, Operational Metrics, and Valuation Multiples
• Implied Price Per Share
• Ownership Activity/ Insider Trades
• Ownership Summary
• An analysis of ESG Risk Rating
• Key Professionals
• Key Board Members
• Key Risks Considerations
• Analyst Ratings
• Analyst Industry Views
• Disclosures
Leidos Holdings (LDOS): Primed for Growth— Outlook & its 4 Biggest Catalysts!-Major Drivers, Thesis & Initiation of Coverage: Forecasts,DCF, Valuation, Peer Analysis, ESG & Risks
Leidos delivered a stellar Q2 2024 performance, posting a 7.7% revenue increase to $4.13 billion, alongside a 33% surge in adjusted EBITDA, propelling margins to an impressive 13.5%. The company’s operational excellence, low attrition, and strategic investments in AI, cybersecurity, and hypersonics are setting the stage for sustained growth. With record adjusted EPS of $2.63, beating expectations by $0.36, and a strong backlog of $36.5 billion, Leidos continues to position itself as a leading player in the federal and defense sectors. Leidos’ four strategic pillars—Promises Made, Promises Kept; the North Star strategy; integration of acquisitions like Dynetics and Security Detection and Automation; and business capture performance—are key growth drivers. Notable highlights include a 22% revenue jump in the Health and Civil segment and a solid 6% gain in Defense Systems. However, headwinds in National Security and Digital remain, with contract protests and $39 million in write-downs from U.K. operations. As Leidos continues to sharpen its technological edge in AI and cybersecurity, the integration of high-value acquisitions in critical areas like satellite payloads and hypersonics will be pivotal. With upgraded guidance for FY2024 and a robust cash flow outlook, the question remains—can Leidos capitalize on these key catalysts to sustain its growth trajectory?