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UK’s QinetiQ reviews US defence business, lifts 2027 forecast; shares jump

By Thomson Reuters May 21, 2026 | 4:16 AM

May 21 (Reuters) – QinetiQ was reviewing all options for its struggling U.S. business, it said on Thursday, while lifting its revenue growth and operating margin forecast for the 2027 ​fiscal year.

Shares of the British defence services contractor rose ‌as much as 11% to about £4.77 – the biggest gainer on the pan-European STOXX 600 index.

The Hampshire, UK-based company, which offers testing and training as well as engineering services, has been restructuring its business, cutting costs, and simplifying ‌its ​portfolio, particularly in the U.S.

“Seen as lower ⁠quality, more volatile, exiting ⁠this (U.S.) business, whilst likely painful relative to the price paid for it, would leave QinetiQ a higher quality organisation in our view, with a much cleaner strategy,” Jefferies analysts said in ​a note.

QinetiQ’s U.S. business offers services such as advanced sensing, surveillance, cyber and intelligence capabilities and contributed 15% to the ⁠total revenue in the year ended ⁠March 31.

“The U.S. defence services market remained challenging ​during the year, reflecting a combination of budgetary pressures, a shift ​in customer spending towards platform and hardware programmes and slower ‌contract awards,” the firm said in a statement.

ORDER INTAKE SURGES

QinetiQ forecast revenue growth of 3%-5% and an operating margin of 11%-11.5%, compared with its January forecast of around 3% organic growth and ⁠an 11% margin.

Order intake surged 83% to £3.57 billion ($4.79 billion) in 2026, lifting its order backlog to £4.42 billion, mainly thanks to deals struck for ⁠its Europe, Middle ‌East and Africa business.

QinetiQ, which counts the UK ⁠Ministry of Defence and US Department of Defense ​among ‌its customers, said underlying profit before tax rose ​16% to £230 ⁠million, while revenue was broadly flat at £1.92 billion.

U.S. President Donald Trump has ordered the U.S. department to rename itself as the Department of War, a change that will require action by Congress.

($1 = 0.7447 pounds)

(Reporting by Neeshita Beura in Bengaluru, Writing by Yadarisa Shabong; Editing ​by Harikrishnan Nair)