Shares in protection contractor Lockheed Martin (LMT -2.45%) declined by as a lot as 6% in early morning buying and selling Thursday on the information that chief monetary officer (CFO) Jay Malave was departing the corporate to pursue different alternatives.
An fascinating departure
Malave has held the title of CFO at two companies that have been a part of the previous United Applied sciences (UTC Service and UTC Aerospace Methods), the protection firm L3Harris Applied sciences, and, since 2022, Lockheed Martin. So it is arduous to consider a extra vital alternative than Lockheed Martin, with a market cap round $110 billion.
Furthermore, the timing of the departure, just some days earlier than the protection contractor releases its first-quarter earnings report on April 22, raises questions.
The place subsequent for Lockheed Martin
On a optimistic notice, the corporate has appointed a 26-year firm veteran, Evan Scott, as CFO efficient instantly. Administration additionally moved to dispel fears over any consequence for earnings by saying that it “will reaffirm the corporate’s beforehand issued 2025 steering.”
Nevertheless, the corporate says, this steering would not embrace the “evolving impacts of tariffs” in addition to the latest announcement of the Subsequent Technology Air Dominance venture, which goals to interchange the corporate’s F-22 with a fighter jet that may enable the U.S. Air Pressure to keep up fight superiority.
It is solely pure that buyers will speculate over the explanations for the abrupt departure of a CFO who had been in his place for under three years (as but, Malave stays on the board of GE Vernova), and that hypothesis has taken the inventory down in the present day.

Picture supply: Getty Pictures.
Nonetheless, with earnings about to be launched on Tuesday, buyers and analysts could have loads of time to query CEO James Taiclet and others concerning the trajectory of Lockheed’s enterprise. The explanations for the departure might don’t have anything in any respect to do with operational or administrative issues on the firm.
Lee Samaha has no place in any of the shares talked about. The Motley Idiot has positions in and recommends L3Harris Applied sciences. The Motley Idiot recommends Lockheed Martin. The Motley Idiot has a disclosure coverage.