Opinion | Why Lockheed's acquisition of Aerojet will be a 'boon for U.S. innovation'

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Opinion: Some observers view the Lockheed Martin-Aerojet Rocketdyne merger as an early test of the Biden Administration’s antitrust enforcement policies. But there’s much more at stake here.

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Raytheon Technologies in particular has publicly complained that the combination would leave it dependent on a direct competitor for much of the propulsion in its missile offerings. Indeed, Aerojet Rocketdyne is a supplier of solid rocket motors and also is a source of defense technologies including hypersonic engines and the propulsive Divert and Attitude Control System that steers missile defense kill vehicles.

There are significant national advantages to bringing Aerojet Rocketdyne under the corporate roof of a prime contractor with $65 billion in annual revenue. Broadly speaking, it will provide financial stability for the propulsion provider while making more resources available for research and development in key technology areas.

Moreover, by bringing a key link of its supply chain in house, Lockheed Martin will be positioned to offer better prices to its government customers and the transaction also will lead to efficiencies and innovation that will benefit the whole industry. One of the public comments about the Lockheed Martin-Aerojet Rocketdyne deal is rooted in a commonly held assumption that vertical integration, in which primes take ownership of supply chains, stifles competition by giving these companies excessive marketplace clout. That view is myopic, especially in industries that are highly dynamic such as the defense industry.

Vertical integration has been a fact of life in the aerospace and defense industry since the early 1990s, when the end of the Cold War triggered a wave of consolidation that continues today. On the propulsion side, a flurry of activity over a three-year period starting in 2001 reduced the number of U.S. solid rocket motor providers from five to just two: Aerojet Rocketdyne ; and ATK.

 

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