Stock Markets June 22, 2026 05:20 PM

Lockheed Martin Awarded $83.2 Million Modification to Supply Missiles for Army CPS Program

Cost-plus-incentive-fee amendment supports procurement of All Up Rounds, with work spread across multiple U.S. sites and completion slated for mid-2029

By Derek Hwang
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Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton, Colorado, will produce additional missiles for the Army’s Conventional Prompt Strike program under an $83.2 million contract modification issued by the U.S. Department of War. The change funds procurement of All Up Rounds, allocates work across several U.S. locations, and obligates $79.3 million in fiscal 2025 Missile Procurement funds.

Lockheed Martin Awarded $83.2 Million Modification to Supply Missiles for Army CPS Program
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Key Points

  • Lockheed Martin received an $83.2 million cost-plus-incentive-fee contract modification to produce missiles tied to the Army's Conventional Prompt Strike program.
  • Work will be performed by Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton, Colorado, under contract N00030-22-C-1025 and is allocated across multiple U.S. locations with specified percentage shares.
  • The Army will obligate $79.3 million in fiscal 2025 Missile Procurement funds at award; those funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The contract was awarded sole source by Strategic Systems Programs and is expected to conclude by June 30, 2029.

The U.S. Department of War has modified an existing contract to provide Lockheed Martin Corp. (NYSE:LMT) with $83.2 million to manufacture further missiles intended for the Army's Conventional Prompt Strike program, the department announced today.

The award is a cost-plus-incentive-fee change to a standing Navy contract and is specifically designated to finance the procurement of All Up Rounds that will meet Army requirements. The work is to be performed by Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton, Colorado, under contract N00030-22-C-1025.

Execution of the program will be distributed across a number of U.S. sites. The announced breakdown assigns 31% of work to Denver, Colorado; 26% to Magna, Utah; 14% to Cortland, Alabama; 10% to Simsbury, Connecticut; and 7% each to East Aurora and Owego, New York. Sunnyvale, California, is slated to receive 2% of the work, with the remaining 3% spread among various other locations.

At the time the modification was awarded, the Army will obligate $79.3 million in fiscal 2025 Missile Procurement funds. The department noted that those funds will not expire at the close of the current fiscal year.

The contract modification was issued as a sole source award by Strategic Systems Programs in Washington, D.C., under the authority of 10 U.S. Code 3204 (a)(1). The work is scheduled for completion on June 30, 2029.


Program and contracting details

This action amends an existing Navy contract rather than creating a new procurement vehicle, and it uses the cost-plus-incentive-fee structure to cover production of the All Up Rounds. Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton will serve as the performing location under the contract number provided by the department.

Geographic and fiscal notes

The contract specifies a multi-location execution plan with the largest shares of work allocated to Denver and Magna, and smaller portions to facilities in Alabama, Connecticut, New York, and California. The Army is obligating $79.3 million in missile procurement appropriations for fiscal 2025, and those funds are not subject to expiration at the end of the fiscal year.

Timeline and oversight

Strategic Systems Programs in Washington, D.C., issued the sole source award under the cited provision of federal law. The department sets the expected completion date for the contracted work as June 30, 2029.


Note: This report covers the contract modification announced by the department and presents the facts as released, including the contract number, funding amounts, work distribution, award authority, and anticipated completion date.

Risks

  • Multi-year execution through the June 30, 2029 completion date introduces schedule risk for program delivery and production timelines.
  • Distribution of work across numerous sites adds operational and logistical complexity that could affect coordination and execution.

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