CW
CURTISS WRIGHT CORP (CW)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered double‑digit top-line growth and broad margin expansion: revenue $876.6M (+12% y/y), adjusted operating margin 18.3% (+130 bps), and adjusted EPS $3.23 (+21% y/y) . Consensus was exceeded on revenue, EPS, and EBITDA (see Estimates Context)*
- Guidance raised across the board: sales growth to 9–10%, operating income +15–18%, operating margin 18.5–18.7%, EPS to $12.70–$13.00, and FCF to $520–$535M .
- Demand remained strong: new orders $1.0B (>1.1x book‑to‑bill), backlog $3.9B (+12% YTD), and FCF $117M (+17% y/y) .
- Key catalysts: accelerating Flight Data Recorder retrofit programs with Honeywell, robust NATO and allied defense demand, strong naval programs (Columbia, Virginia), and commercial nuclear partnerships (e.g., Rolls‑Royce SMR) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- “We are successfully executing our Pivot to Growth strategy and building strong momentum to compound sustained profitable growth.” — Lynn M. Bamford, CEO .
- Defense Electronics margins expanded to 26.8% on favorable absorption and operational excellence; segment sales +11% y/y .
- Naval & Power sales +19% y/y with adjusted margin +210 bps to 16.5%, driven by Columbia-class timing and commercial nuclear strength .
- What Went Wrong
- Higher R&D investments and tariff mitigation actions temper margin upside (company expects >$20M gross tariff exposure mitigated to ~$10M net in 2025) .
- Sequential timing headwinds in Ground Defense (CR and order timing cause Q3 revenue dip before strong Q4) .
- Capex increased across segments (Q2 capex $19.4M vs $11.1M y/y), modestly offsetting FCF growth .
Financial Results
Segment performance (Adjusted unless noted):
KPIs and cash flow:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Curtiss‑Wright delivered a strong second quarter, highlighted by double‑digit revenue growth… significant operating margin expansion… better‑than‑expected free cash flow generation.” — Lynn M. Bamford .
- “We have increased our full‑year Adjusted guidance for sales, operating income, diluted EPS and free cash flow.” — Lynn M. Bamford .
- CFO on tariffs: roughly 20% of portfolio subject to tariffs; ~$30M gross impact with mitigation to ~$10M net; actions include pricing and operational changes .
- CFO on segment outlook: Defense Electronics margins to a new high 26.8–27.0%; A&I margin 17.3–17.6%; Naval & Power 16.3–16.5% .
- Nuclear optionality: AP1000 reactor orders anticipated by 2026; U.S. executive actions to accelerate large reactors and SMRs; partnership with Rolls‑Royce SMR .
Q&A Highlights
- Defense Electronics margins sustainability: driven by throughput, commercial and operational excellence, some pricing wins; balanced by ERP implementation and R&D ramp; margins expected to hold near Q2 levels even with Q3 sales dip .
- Flight Data Recorder retrofit cadence: expected to accelerate; broad regional jet coverage; Airbus qualification targeted for 2026; capacity planning underway .
- M&A pipeline/capital allocation: near‑term targets dismissed for fit; active pipeline (private preferred); board increased buyback authorization by $400M to $534M; emphasis on returning capital .
- Ground Defense revenue timing: Q3 sequential decline expected due to order timing/CR; Q4 surge anticipated; Q2 Defense Electronics book‑to‑bill ~0.9; backlog +3% y/y .
- FMS mix and segments: expanding European demand (e.g., Rheinmetall Boxer); dFMS ~10% of CW revenue expected; strong naval aircraft handling/arresting systems internationally .
- Columbia-class status: H1 ramp driven by material receipts; production stabilizes in H2; progressing towards desired cadence of one per year .
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Implications: modest beats across revenue, EPS, and EBITDA suggest estimates likely inch higher for H2; management reiterated Q3 revenue dip in Ground Defense before strong Q4, so estimates should reflect mix‑driven margin finish .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Broad‑based execution: strongest y/y growth in Naval & Power and Defense Electronics with structural margin expansion, positioning for above‑consensus H2 finish if demand cadence holds .
- Raised FY25 guidance is a positive near‑term catalyst; operating margin now 18.5–18.7% with levers (pricing, throughput, mix) offsetting tariff/R&D headwinds .
- Watch Q3 set‑up: Ground Defense revenue timing likely soft; management expects maintained margins and a strong Q4 ramp; any order timing resolution into late Q3 would be supportive .
- Flight Data Recorder retrofit represents a multi‑year secular tailwind; Airbus qualification in 2026 adds optionality; consider upside in commercial aero within Defense Electronics .
- Commercial nuclear optionality building: AP1000 orders targeted by 2026; Rolls‑Royce SMR partnership adds UK localization and content breadth; medium‑term thesis leverages SMR prototypes ramp .
- Balance sheet/capital returns: enhanced buyback authorization and dividend increase support TSR while management remains selective on M&A .
- Tactical trade: into Q3, favor earnings quality and margin resilience; into Q4, backlog conversion and A&D mix could drive upside; monitor tariff developments and FMS momentum .