Mode

qualitative/stocks/GD

General Dynamics Corporation

Symbol

GD

Sector

Industrials

Country

US

Business Model

3.4/5

GD's business model is anchored by a $118B backlog providing multi-year revenue visibility across submarine, vehicle, and IT programs, with Gulfstream adding a premium but cyclical commercial layer. The U.S.-centric footprint and labor-intensive manufacturing constrain scalability and geographic diversification relative to peers, while the mission-critical nature of defense contracts supports high revenue quality.

Revenue Predictability

4.25

Summary

GD ended FY2025 with a record $118B backlog equal to roughly 2.2x annual revenue, with a consolidated book-to-bill ratio of 1.5x for the year. Virginia-class submarine deliveries are contracted through 2032 and the 12-ship Columbia-class program underpins Marine Systems visibility for over a decade.

Product Diversification

3.25

Summary

Four segments spread across business aviation (Aerospace, roughly 25% of FY2025 revenue), naval shipbuilding (Marine Systems, roughly 32%), armored systems (Combat Systems, roughly 17%), and government IT (Technologies, roughly 26%). No segment exceeds 32%, but Combat Systems, Marine, and Technologies all draw from the same U.S. defense budget, limiting true end-market diversification.

Geographic Diversification

2.00

Summary

Approximately 83% of FY2024 revenue came from U.S. sources — 69% federal government and 14% U.S. commercial — while non-U.S. government and commercial together totaled 17%. Gulfstream's global client base and international defense sales provide some non-U.S. exposure, but single-country concentration is substantial.

Scalability

2.75

Summary

The Technologies segment carries software and IT economics with some operating leverage, but Marine Systems and Combat Systems are labor-intensive, capital-heavy operations where output scales with headcount and industrial capacity. Electric Boat requires several thousand additional workers to meet Columbia-class schedules, illustrating the human capital intensity of GD's largest growth programs.

Revenue Quality

3.75

Summary

Defense contracts are mission-critical and multi-year, governed by U.S. government appropriations with high annual renewal rates; submarine programs bind customers across decades. Gulfstream, while high-end, represents discretionary commercial revenue. The blended portfolio tilts toward contractual and program-based revenue that is durable across economic cycles.

Competitive Advantages

3.1/5

The dominant moat element is switching costs: mid-program substitution on GD's major defense platforms is structurally impossible across a $118B committed backlog. Pricing power is constrained by government-negotiated contract structures covering roughly 75% of revenue, and network effects are absent in defense manufacturing and business aviation. Gulfstream's brand and range leadership provide a commercial premium that partially offsets the government-side limitations.

Pricing Power

3.00

Summary

Switching Costs

4.50

Summary

Network Effects

1.50

Summary

Brand Strength

3.50

Summary

Innovation Barrier

3.25

Summary

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_ Report generated by Moatware Analysis AI

This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a buy or sell recommendation or financial advice. Do your own research before investing.