Raytheon Lands Five Agreements to Ramp Tomahawk to 1,000+, AMRAAM to 1,900+

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Raytheon, an RTX business, signed five up-to-seven-year framework agreements with the U.S. Department of War to increase annual production of Tomahawk to over 1,000 units, AMRAAM to at least 1,900 units and SM-6 to more than 500 missiles. The deals also mandate two- to fourfold rate increases for SM-3 Block IIA and accelerated SM-3 Block IB output, backed by facility and technology investments included in RTX’s 2026 outlook.

1. RTX Secures Five Landmark Framework Agreements with U.S. Department of War

RTX’s Raytheon business has signed five up-to-seven-year framework agreements with the U.S. Department of War to expand annual production of key precision munitions. Under the deals, annual output of Tomahawk cruise missiles will exceed 1,000 units, AMRAAM air-to-air missiles will rise to at least 1,900 units, and SM-6 surface-to-air missiles will top 500 units. Production of Standard Missile-3 Block IIA interceptors will be ramped up by as much as four times current rates, while SM-3 Block IB production acceleration targets similar growth. RTX plans to invest in new manufacturing lines at its Tucson, Huntsville and Andover facilities, leveraging a co-funded structure designed to preserve upfront free cash flow even as it scales capacity to meet long-term demand forecasts embedded in its 2026 financial outlook.

2. RTX Wins $1.03 B U.S. Army LTAMDS Radar Contract

RTX has been awarded a $1.03 billion contract to supply the U.S. Army with its Next-Generation Lower Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor (LTAMDS). The multi-year award strengthens RTX’s revenue visibility in integrated air and missile defense, with initial deliveries scheduled to begin in 2027. LTAMDS is set to replace legacy Patriot radars, offering 360-degree coverage, higher target throughput and improved electronic protection. The program leverages modular open systems architecture to reduce follow-on upgrade costs and positions RTX to capture additional sensor integration work across joint force air defense initiatives.

3. RTX Commits $139 Million to Expand Singapore Aviation Hub

At the 2026 Singapore Air Show, RTX announced $139 million of new investments to deepen its aerospace footprint in Singapore. Pratt & Whitney will add automated, AI-driven maintenance lines for its GTF Fan Drive Gear System at Seletar and expand hot-section coating operations in Tuas by 25 percent to meet surging engine demand. Collins Aerospace secured multi-year service contracts worth tens of millions with Singapore Airlines and All Nippon Airways to support Boeing 777F and 787 fleets under FlightSense™ health-management agreements. These investments underscore Singapore’s strategic role in RTX’s global MRO network and are expected to drive incremental free cash flow beginning in late 2026.

4. Vietjet Orders 44 Additional GTF-Powered A320neo Family Jets

Pratt & Whitney, an RTX business, has secured a new order from Vietjet Air for 44 additional GTF-powered Airbus A320neo family aircraft, including 24 A321neos and 20 A321XLRs, taking Vietjet’s total GTF commitments to 137 aircraft. Deliveries commence in July 2026 under a 12-year EngineWise® maintenance agreement. Vietjet’s fleet expansion targets fuel-efficiency gains of up to 20 percent per trip and positions RTX to capture aftermarket service revenues as part of its growing installed base of more than 2,600 GTF engines delivered worldwide.

Sources

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