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Huntington Ingalls posts lower quarterly margin as costs weigh

May 5, 2026 8:13 AM EDT

Huntington Ingalls Industries logo is seen in this illustration taken July 26, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

May 5 (Reuters) - U.S. ‌military ​shipbuilder ​Huntington Ingalls posted a lower first-quarter operating margin on Tuesday, hurt ‌by higher costs amid inflation and ⁠volatility in global trade.

Shares of the company ‌were down nearly 3% ‌in premarket trading.

U.S. tariffs on major trading partners have added to broader ​market uncertainty, deepening strain on global supply chains across sectors, including defense.

Despite ⁠strong U.S. demand for submarines and aircraft carriers amid ​China's growing naval presence and broader global tensions, mounting cost pressures ​have weighed on the ‌shipbuilder.

For the first quarter ending March 31, sales in its ⁠Newport News shipbuilding business increased 19.3% to $1.67 billion but segment operating margin fell 80 ⁠basis points to 5.3%.

The overall cost of product ​sales rose 20% to $1.74 billion.

Huntington's quarterly profit per share remained flat at $3.79, while its operating ‌margin fell to 5% from 5.9% last year.

Total quarterly revenue ‌stood at $3.1 billion, above Wall Street ⁠estimates of $3.02 billion, as ‌per data ​compiled by LSEG.

(Reporting by Aishwarya Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Diti ‌Pujara)



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