Booz Allen Hamilton (BAH) stock climbed 5.6% in premarket trading on Friday after the company posted quarterly earnings that landed well ahead of Wall Street’s expectations.
Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corporation, BAH
The government IT and consulting firm reported adjusted earnings of $1.78 per share for its fiscal first quarter, up from $1.61 a year ago and comfortably ahead of the $1.34 consensus estimate from FactSet. Revenue, however, came in at $2.78 billion, down 6.4% year over year and short of the $2.87 billion analysts had projected.
Net income for the quarter was $205 million, or $1.68 per share, compared with $193 million, or $1.52 per share, in the same period last year.
The earnings beat stands out given how difficult the past year has been for the company. BAH stock had dropped 58% from its all-time closing high on Oct. 28, 2024, before Friday’s move.
Total backlog rose 3.1% to $38 billion, a figure that may offer some comfort to investors watching for signs of contract stability.
The profit improvement was driven largely by cost-cutting rather than revenue growth. Booz Allen cut thousands of jobs over the past year as contract work dried up, particularly in its civil business segment.
Total headcount as of March 31 stood at 31,500, down sharply from 35,800 a year earlier. The company also reported income tax expense of just $21 million for the quarter, compared with $49 million in the same period last year, which gave an additional lift to the bottom line.
Back in October, the company announced a restructuring plan aimed at cutting $150 million in costs. Friday’s results suggest that effort is taking hold.
The broader environment for federal contractors remains tough. The Trump administration has moved aggressively to cut spending on government consulting contracts and has pushed firms like Booz Allen to justify their work and propose cost reductions.
Booz Allen derives roughly 98% of its revenue from government-related work, making it particularly exposed to shifts in federal spending priorities.
In January, the Treasury Department canceled all of its contracts with Booz Allen. The cancellations were tied to former employee Charles Littlejohn, who leaked confidential tax information on President Trump and other Americans while working as an IRS contractor. The Treasury contracts were relatively limited in size at $21 million, but the episode raised questions about Booz Allen’s standing with the current administration.
For fiscal year 2027, the company forecast adjusted EPS of $6.00 to $6.35, with revenue expected between $11.2 billion and $11.7 billion. Analysts had penciled in EPS of $6.21 and revenue of $11.46 billion — both figures fall within Booz Allen’s guided range.
The in-line guidance appears to be what the market needed to see. With the stock down sharply from its peak, investors may have been looking for confirmation that the worst is behind the company.
BAH stock was up 5.6% in premarket trading Friday at the time of reporting.
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