| Merger marries defense and information
by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
February 2006
As information becomes just as important
as firepower in fighting and winning wars in the 21st
century, defense contractors are looking to add information
technology (IT) to their portfolio of expertise. General
Dynamics, a $19.2 billion weapons-maker headquartered
in Falls Church, has moved in that direction with its
acquisition of Anteon International Corp., a major IT
services firm based in Fairfax. The purchase cost General
Dynamics about $2.2 billion in cash and assumed debt.
Acquiring Anteon significantly strengthens
the company’s ability to “provide a broad
menu of seamless IT services to defense, intelligence
and homeland security customers,” says Nicholas
D. Chabraja, chairman and CEO at General Dynamics.
The acquisition caps a year in which General Dynamics
made a strong effort to expand its ability to go after
major hybrid defense/IT contracts in areas such as network
security, systems integration and battlefield simulation
applications. Anteon marked the fifth IT company General
Dynamics brought into the fold.
The company’s efforts are part of a larger trend
that is transforming the role of defense contractors.
IT is an easy growth area for major companies. The IT
industry is relatively unfettered by antitrust regulations.
It’s highly fragmented, with plenty of small cash-strapped
specialty firms ripe for the taking. And as the military
continues its transformation to a more streamlined,
information-centric force, it’s expected to begin
offering numerous multi-year, high-dollar IT-related
contracts.
“The defense market is following the commercial
economy out of heavy industry and into services,”
Loren B. Thompson, a defense industry consultant for
the Lexington Institute told The Washington Post. “That’s
what this move is all about. It’s about being
in the growth part of the defense sector.”
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