Better Buy: Raytheon Company vs. Huntington Ingalls

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Raytheon (NYSE: RTN) and Huntington Ingalls (NYSE: HII), though both major Pentagon contractors, offer two very different profiles to potential investors. Huntington Ingalls is at its heart a metal-bender, a shipbuilding specialist responsible for the Navy's massive carriers and a significant portion of the rest of the fleet. Raytheon meanwhile doesn't make any of the tanks, planes, or ships that show up on military recruitment posters, but its electronics, sensors, and missiles can be found on seemingly every weapons system the Pentagon deploys.

Raytheon is also a much larger company than Huntington Ingalls, generating three-times the revenue and commanding a market capitalization five times greater. But its shares are also more expensive on both a price-to-earnings and price-to-sales.

The companies do have similarities, notably they both figure to be among the major beneficiaries of an ongoing surge in Pentagon spending.

Here's a look at the outlook for both Raytheon and Huntington Ingalls, to determine which, if either, is the better buy today.

Market Cap

TTM Revenue

TTM P/E Ratio

TTM P/S Ratio

TTM Dividend Yield

Raytheon

$56.21B

$25.61B

28.19

2.20

1.66%

Huntington Ingalls

$10.32B

$7.59B

20.40

1.36

1.14%

Source: Yahoo! Finance. Data as of July 27, 2018. TTM = Trailing-twelve months

Rockets firing

Raytheon is a defense specialist focused on areas including precision weapons, anti-missile systems, sensors, and radars, areas of particular interest to the Pentagon and U.S. allies. It's sensor business earlier this year beat out Northrop Grumman to win a high-profile award to supply a sophisticated camera system for Lockheed Martin's F-35 fighter, and its radar units are also the eyes behind Lockheed's THAAD anti-ballistic missile system.

Tomahawk cruise missile
Tomahawk cruise missile

A Raytheon-made Tomahawk cruise missile. Image source: Raytheon.

The company is also the most diverse U.S. prime contractor in terms of international sales, with foreign customers accounting for about one-third of total revenue and more than 40% of its backlog. Raytheon's Patriot missile systems are deployed across the Middle East and in a growing number of European countries.

Raytheon on July 26 reported a second quarter beat thanks to growing missile sales and increased classified work and hiked its fully year revenue guidance by $1 billion to between $28.5 billion and $29.5 billion in sales. The company expects significant orders in the second half of the year for its Tomahawk, Griffin, and other missile systems, but if anything remained conservative on the timing of foreign Patriot and radar orders that could offer additional upside for late 2018 or into 2019.