Thomas E. Stiehle
Thanks, Chris, and good morning. Let me start by briefly discussing our second quarter results, and then I'll address our outlook for the year. For more detail, please refer to the earnings release issued this morning and posted to our website. Beginning with our consolidated results on Slide 6 of the presentation, our second quarter revenues are approximately $3.1 billion, increased 3.5% compared to the same period last year. The higher revenue was attributable to year-over-year growth at all 3 divisions. Ingalls revenues of $724 million increased by 1.7% compared to the second quarter of 2024, driven primarily by higher volume on the guided missile destroyer program, partially offset by lower volume on the LHA and LPD programs. Newport News revenues of $1.6 billion increased by 4.4% compared to the second quarter of 2024, driven primarily by higher volumes in both Columbia and Virginia-class submarine programs, partially offset by unfavorable cumulative adjustments on aircraft carriers. Mission Technologies revenues of $791 million increased by 3.4% compared to the second quarter of 2024, driven primarily by a nonrecurring favorable resolution related to a C5ISR contract as well as higher live, virtual and constructive training volume. Excluding the impact of the noted resolution, Mission Technologies results were generally in line with our prior expectations and the guidance we provided on the first quarter call. Moving on to Slide 7. Segment operating income of $172 million and segment operating margin of 5.6% in the second quarter of 2025 were both down from prior year results, but were consistent with our expectations for the quarter. At Newport News, segment operating income was $82 million, and operating margin was 5.1% compared to $111 million and 7.2% in the second quarter of 2024. The decreases were driven by performance of the Virginia-class submarine program and aircraft carrier construction, partially offset by favorable contract incentives of those programs as well as a higher risk retirement on the Columbia- class submarine program. Additionally, prior year results benefited from favorable contract adjustments and incentives on the Aircraft Carrier Refueling and Complex Overhaul program. For the second quarter of 2025, Newport News Shipbuilding's net cumulative adjustment was negative $17 million. This includes a negative adjustment on CVN 80 as well as other performance adjustments. At Ingalls, segment operating income was $54 million and operating margin was 7.5% compared to $56 million and 7.9% in the second quarter of last year. The decreases were driven by lower performance and lower contract incentives on the amphibious assault ship programs, which was largely offset by favorable contract adjustments related to the guided missile destroyer program. Prior year results included a favorable impact related to the delivery of LPD 29. The second quarter net cumulative adjustment at Ingalls was a positive $4 million and included positive adjustments related to the destroyer program that were largely offset by an unfavorable adjustment related to LHA 8. Mission Technologies operating income and margin were largely consistent year-over-year, with changes in contract mix offsetting the impacts of higher volume. Consolidated operating income for the quarter was $163 million, and operating margin was 5.3% compared to $189 million and 6.3% in the same period last year. The variance was driven by the segment's results I just noted, along with a more favorable operating FAS/ CAS adjustment compared to prior year period. Net earnings in the quarter were $152 million compared to $173 million in the second quarter of 2024. Diluted earnings per share in the quarter were $3.86 and compared to $4.38 in the same period last year. Turning to Slide 8. Cash provided by operations was $823 million in the quarter. Net capital expenditures were $93 million or 3% of revenues. Free cash flow in the quarter was $730 million. Free cash flow results in the quarter were $480 million better than the midpoint of the guidance we provided on the first quarter call. The overperformance is due to a number of factors, including the timing of incentives, some of which were received earlier than previously anticipated; normal quarterly timing of cash receipts and disbursements; and improvement in quarterly taxes and capital expenditure timing. I'll discuss our updated 2025 free cash flow guidance in a moment. During the quarter, we did not repurchase any shares. We did pay a cash dividend of $1.35 per share or $53 million in aggregate. Turning to liquidity and the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with a cash balance of $343 million and liquidity of approximately $2 billion. Our capital allocation priorities are unchanged. We value our investment-grade credit rating, and we'll continue to prioritize prudent debt levels, while strategically investing in our shipyards and thoughtfully growing our dividend while continuing to use excess free cash for share repurchases. Moving on to our outlook on Slide 9. We are reiterating our segment revenue and operating margin guidance for the year. We expect shipbuilding revenue between $8.9 million and $9.1 billion and margins between 5.5% and 6.5%. For Mission Technologies, we expect revenue between $2.9 billion and $3.1 billion. Operating margins between 4% and 4.5%. And EBITDA margins between 8% and 8.5%. Our 2025 guidance is predicated on achieving the operational initiatives we have laid out. As Chris noted, we are progressing on each of these items, and we expect to achieve a meaningful improvement in throughput over the course of the year. Regarding our assumption related to the award of Virginia-class Block VI and Columbia Build II submarines, we continue to expect that award to occur this year. If the award were to push into 2026, it would be a headwind. However, we believe we have accounted for a range of timing considerations within our guidance. For 2025 free cash flow, we are updating our guidance to between $500 million and $600 million. At the midpoint, this is an increase of $150 million compared to our prior guidance range. The majority of this growth is related to updated cash tax expectations given the recent change in tax law, including R&D expensing and bonus depreciation changes. We are also updating a number of discrete income statement guidance elements. We are revising our operating FAS/CAS adjustment from $43 million to $40 million. Our noncurrent state income tax expense for the year is now estimated to be approximately $15 million, with approximately $10 million of that expense falling in the third quarter. This update reflects the state impact, a recently enacted federal tax law changes that benefited our cash flow expectations and may be further impacted depending on how individual states conform to the recent federal tax law changes. Our interest expense guidance has declined by $20 million from our prior outlook, given the strong second quarter cash flow and resulting lower commercial paper usage. Moving on to a preview for the third quarter. For shipbuilding, we expect third quarter sales of approximately $2.2 billion and margins near the low end of our annual guidance range. This does imply a stronger fourth quarter, which is consistent with our expectations and timing of milestones. For Mission Technologies, we expect third quarter sales of approximately $730 million and operating margin of approximately 3.5%. This does imply a sequential decline in revenue However, second quarter results did include the nonrecurring favorable contract resolution I previously discussed. Finally, we expect third quarter free cash flow to be approximately negative $150 million as a result of normal business operations and the strong Q2 cash generation. To close, I will echo Chris' sentiment, it was a good quarter as we continue to make steady progress working our way through challenging ships and executing our 2025 operational initiatives, securing new contracts aligned to the current environment, driving higher throughput and thoughtfully managing costs. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Christie to manage Q&A.