F

General Dynamics (GD) FY2025 Earnings Quality Report

GD·FY2025·English

Grade: F — Defense Contractor With $118B Backlog But Thin Cash Cushion

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-01-30) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: KPMG LLP — Clean opinion

One-line verdict: General Dynamics delivered a standout operational year — revenue +10.1% to $52.55B, operating earnings +11.7% to $5.36B, diluted EPS +13.4% to $15.45, and total backlog surged 30% to $118 billion, driven by $20.1B of combined awards from the U.S. Navy for Virginia-class and Columbia-class submarines and $9.2B of international wheeled and tracked vehicle awards. All four segments grew. Aerospace (Gulfstream) delivered 158 aircraft vs 136 and grew 16.5% with 30bp margin expansion. Marine Systems (submarines) grew 16.6% with 50bp margin expansion. Cash flow was excellent — the MD&A notes "Cash provided by operating activities of $5.1 billion, or 122% of net earnings." Yet the screening engine flags two red flags: cash of $2.33B covers only 24% of total debt of $9.79B (C4 fail), and goodwill plus intangibles of $22.38B equals 87% of equity of $25.62B (D1 fail). Plus a watch on CapEx growing 26.7% against revenue growth of 10.1%. The cash coverage flag is less severe than most of this batch — GD is still manageably leveraged at 1.5x Debt/EBITDA — but the goodwill legacy from the 2018 CSRA acquisition (~$9.9B) remains a structural feature. This is one of the highest-quality operators in the batch; the F grade is a mechanical consequence of two balance-sheet ratio thresholds, not a manipulation signal.

MetricResult
Red Flags**2**
Watch Items**1**
Checks Completed**17/18**
Beneish M-Score**-2.65** (below -2.22, unlikely manipulator)
Altman Z-Score**4.86** (safe)
Fiscal YearFY2025 (ended December 31, 2025)
AuditorKPMG LLP

The Numbers: Defense Super-Cycle in Full Swing

General Dynamics is a four-segment aerospace and defense company. The MD&A describes the business environment clearly: "defense spending has been at elevated levels, and the administration has publicly stated support for further increases in fiscal year (FY) 2027. This is reflected in the significant demand in U.S. Navy shipbuilding, particularly submarines."

SegmentRevenue 2025Revenue 2024GrowthOp Margin 2025Op Margin 2024
Aerospace (Gulfstream)$13,110M$11,249M+16.5%13.3%13.0%
Marine Systems (submarines)$16,723M$14,343M+16.6%7.0%6.5%
Combat Systems (vehicles, munitions)$9,246M$8,997M+2.8%14.4%14.2%
Technologies (IT services + C5ISR)$13,471M$13,127M+2.6%9.5%9.6%
**Total****$52,550M****$47,716M****+10.1%****10.2%****10.1%**

Gulfstream aircraft deliveries went from 136 to 158 (+22 units, +16.2%). The MD&A attributes the growth to "additional G700 deliveries. Initial deliveries of the new G800 largely offset the decrease in G650 revenue with its final deliveries in 2025." Marine Systems revenue growth came from Virginia-class and Columbia-class submarine construction volume. Combat Systems saw international demand — European vehicle programs — offsetting declines from "the termination of the M10 Booker program and lower volume on Stryker programs." Technologies grew primarily from IT services demand.

Backlog: $118 Billion

The most striking number in the 10-K: "Our total backlog, including funded and unfunded portions, was $118 billion on December 31, 2025, compared to $90.6 billion at the end of 2024." A 30% jump in backlog on a $52B revenue base is extraordinary. The key awards named in the MD&A:

·$20.1 billion combined U.S. Navy Virginia-class and Columbia-class submarine awards
·$9.2 billion combined international wheeled and tracked vehicle awards

At $118B of backlog vs $52.55B of annual revenue, that is 2.24 years of coverage — very high visibility for a defense contractor.

The Tariff Hit to Aerospace Margins

The MD&A quantifies a small but notable negative: "Our Aerospace business has been impacted by inflationary pressures and the administration's implementation of tariffs. To date, the tariffs have not had a material impact on our results but did reduce the Aerospace operating margins by 30 basis points in 2025. The duration and extent of the tariffs continue to evolve."

A 30bp margin hit on $13.1B of Aerospace revenue is ~$39M of operating income — meaningful for a single data point, but not material to the consolidated result.

Cash Flow: Strong

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025
Net Income$3.31B$3.78B$4.21B
Operating Cash Flow$4.71B$4.11B$5.12B
**CFFO / Net Income****1.42x****1.09x****1.22x**
CapEx$(0.90)B$(0.92)B$(1.16)B
Free Cash Flow$3.81B$3.20B$3.96B

Operating cash flow of $5.12B converted at 122% of net earnings — a figure the MD&A itself highlights. FCF of $3.96B comfortably funded $1.16B of CapEx and dividends. The MD&A explains the CapEx increase: "We have invested in our facilities and workforce to increase production capacity to meet this demand, and expect to continue to do so" — primarily Marine Systems capacity for submarine construction.

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangePassDSO 17 days, -6 days YoY
A2AR vs Revenue GrowthPassAR -19.2% vs revenue +10.1%
A3Revenue vs CFFOPassRevenue +10.1%, CFFO +24.5%

DSO of just 17 days is exceptional — GD bills its government customers quickly and the collection cycle is fast. The -6 day improvement in DSO is a sign of strong working capital management. AR actually *declined* 19.2% while revenue grew 10% — the opposite of the revenue-recognition warning pattern. This is as clean as revenue quality gets.

Expense Quality

#CheckResultDetail
B1Inventory vs COGSPassInventory -5.1% vs COGS +10.5%. Normal
B2CapEx vs Revenue**Watch**CapEx +26.7% vs revenue +10.1%
B3SG&A RatioPass32.6%. Normal
B4Gross MarginPass15.1%, -0.3pp YoY. Stable

B2 is a watch. CapEx jumped from $924M to $1,163M (+25.8%) while revenue grew 10.1%. The 10-K explains this is deliberate capacity expansion — primarily Marine Systems building submarine-construction facilities in response to the Navy's accelerating demand. This is investment-driven, not speculation.

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs Net IncomePassCFFO/NI = 1.22. Profits backed by cash
C2Free Cash FlowPassFCF $4.0B, FCF/NI = 0.94
C3Accruals RatioPass-1.6%. Low accruals
C4Cash vs Debt**Fail**Cash $2.3B covers only 24% of debt $9.8B

C4 is a red flag. Cash of $2.33B against $9.79B of debt — 24% coverage. This is better than most companies in this batch (Equifax was 4%, Emerson 11%, Eaton 8%, FDX 15%, FTV 11%), but still below the 30% threshold that the engine uses for pass.

Note GD's cash increased from $1.70B to $2.33B during 2025 — the balance sheet is improving, not deteriorating. Debt dropped from $10.68B to $9.79B, a $0.89B reduction.

Balance Sheet Health

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + Intangibles**Fail**$22.4B = 87% of equity
D2LeveragePassDebt/EBITDA = 1.5x. Healthy
D3Soft Asset GrowthPassOther assets +4.8% vs revenue +10.1%
D4Asset ImpairmentN/ANo write-off data

D1 is a red flag. Goodwill of $21.01B plus other intangibles of $1.38B totals $22.38B against equity of $25.62B — 87%. The goodwill is almost entirely the result of the 2018 CSRA acquisition (which created what is now GD Technologies) plus earlier deals. The intangibles are small relative to goodwill, indicating most of the acquisition premium has been allocated to non-amortizing goodwill.

D2 Leverage is healthy: Debt/EBITDA of 1.5x is investment-grade territory, and the cash coverage issue is about the absolute cash-to-debt ratio, not debt-service capacity.

Acquisition Risk

#CheckResultDetail
E1Serial Acquirer FCFPassFCF after acquisitions positive
E2Goodwill SurgePassGoodwill+Intangibles change 1% YoY

GD is not a serial acquirer in the current cycle — goodwill is essentially flat YoY. The D1 flag is historical, not recent.

Beneish M-Score: -2.65 (Clean)

Comfortably below the -2.22 threshold. All Beneish variables look normal.

Altman Z-Score: 4.86 (Safe)

Well above the 2.90 safe threshold. Strong working capital, accumulated retained earnings, healthy EBIT/assets, and a market equity that comfortably covers total liabilities all contribute.

Key Risks from the 10-K

1. U.S. Government Revenue Concentration

Item 1A opens: "Our revenue is concentrated with the U.S. government… Approximately 70% of our consolidated revenue was from the U.S. government. Levels of U.S. defense spending may be impacted by numerous factors, such as the domestic political environment, changes in national and international priorities, and threats to national security. Competing demands for federal funds can pressure various areas of spending. Decreases in U.S. government defense and other spending or changes in spending allocation or priorities could result in one or more of our programs being reduced, delayed or terminated, which could impact our financial performance."

2. Government Shutdowns and Continuing Resolutions

The MD&A names current-period uncertainty: "The administration began taking steps in 2025 to address federal spending and reduce the size of the government. These actions resulted in federal government staff reductions, contract modifications and terminations, and award delays. We experienced some impact from these actions which were largely limited to our IT services business. Our IT services business was also somewhat impacted by the government shutdown at the start of the current fiscal year. We expect some limited ongoing impact from these actions. We entered 2026 with the government operating under a continuing resolution that expires on January 30. Our outlook for the year assumes that the FY26 budget is approved without significant delay or another prolonged shutdown."

A longer shutdown or a full-year continuing resolution (funding at FY25 levels rather than the administration's proposed increases) would cap revenue growth in FY2026.

3. Fixed-Price Contract Risk

Item 1A covers the standard defense-contractor risk around fixed-price contracts. Long-duration contracts have cost estimates that get revised quarterly, and any adjustments flow directly through earnings. GD's Combat Systems segment has already seen one major program termination in 2025: "the termination of the M10 Booker program." The MD&A notes this reduced U.S. military vehicle revenue by $203M.

4. Supply Chain — Submarines and Aerospace

The MD&A repeatedly flags supply chain tightness: "The increased demand has placed great pressure on the shipbuilding supply chain, which was already impacted by significant demographic issues coming out of the global pandemic. Together with the Navy customer, we have been working to stabilize and grow the supply chain to meet this heightened demand." For Aerospace: "we have experienced some challenges in terms of delay including at our Israel-based supplier of mid-cabin airframes caused by the conflict with Hamas."

Submarine construction requires specialized suppliers — a single-source outage can delay a $5B boat by months.

5. Contract Termination for Convenience

"U.S. government contracts are not always fully funded at inception, and any funding is subject to disruption or delay." And: "Government contracts are subject to termination rights by the customer. U.S. government contracts generally permit the government to terminate a contract, in whole or in part, for convenience." The M10 Booker termination mentioned above is a recent example.

6. International Commercial Risk

"Internationally, as a result of ongoing regional conflicts and the overall threat environment, we have seen increased demand, particularly in Europe, for our Combat Systems military products and services." This is a positive tailwind currently, but international military sales come with FX risk, export-control approval risk, and payment terms that vary by country.

7. Tariff Uncertainty for Gulfstream

The MD&A quantifies: "the tariffs have not had a material impact on our results but did reduce the Aerospace operating margins by 30 basis points in 2025. The duration and extent of the tariffs continue to evolve." Depending on Supreme Court rulings and executive actions, the tariff impact could grow or reverse.

8. Goodwill Impairment Risk

The $21B of goodwill (mostly from CSRA) is tested annually for impairment. If any segment underperforms its internal forecasts, a writedown could reduce GAAP equity.

Summary

General Dynamics' FY2025 10-K describes a genuinely strong year. Revenue grew 10.1% to $52.55B. Operating margin expanded 10bp to 10.2%. Diluted EPS grew 13.4%. Backlog jumped 30% to $118B. Operating cash flow at 122% of net income. Gulfstream delivered 158 aircraft. Submarine construction volume surged. International vehicle demand is a real tailwind. Every segment grew in 2025.

Two red flags — both from balance-sheet thresholds, not operational signals:

1.C4 fail — Cash $2.3B covers only 24% of debt $9.8B: The best cash-to-debt ratio in this F-graded batch (better than EFX, EMR, ETN, FDX, FTV). GD is actually improving — cash rose from $1.70B to $2.33B and debt dropped from $10.68B to $9.79B. The ratio is still below the engine's 30% threshold.
2.D1 fail — Goodwill+Intangibles $22.4B = 87% of equity: A legacy of the 2018 CSRA deal. Goodwill is not increasing (change 1% YoY) and there is no sign of impairment risk, but the absolute ratio exceeds the 50% threshold.

Plus one watch: B2 — CapEx +26.7% vs revenue +10.1%. Deliberate capacity expansion for submarine construction.

Things working: DSO of 17 days (exceptional), AR declining while revenue grows (clean), M-Score -2.65 (clean), Altman Z-Score 4.86 (safe), $118B backlog (2.24 years of coverage), Debt/EBITDA 1.5x (investment grade), CFFO 122% of net earnings.

Things to watch: the continuing-resolution risk for FY2026 budget, supply chain tightness in submarine construction and aerospace, the M10 Booker termination pattern recurring on other programs, tariff impacts on Gulfstream margins, and the long-tail of CSRA goodwill being tested annually.

Bottom line: The F grade is a mechanical artifact of the screening framework — two critical-category balance-sheet thresholds are breached. But General Dynamics is arguably the highest-quality operator in this batch of reports: best DSO, best AR-revenue pattern, best backlog visibility, cleanest segment commentary, best M-Score. The business is cleaner than the grade suggests. Investors who prioritize defense super-cycle exposure and high backlog visibility will see this as a pass; investors strictly applying balance-sheet ratio screens will not.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on General Dynamics' FY2025 10-K (SEC EDGAR) and public financial data. It uses forensic accounting screening frameworks (Schilit's *Financial Shenanigans*, Beneish M-Score, Altman Z-Score) for red flag detection. This is NOT investment advice. Screening for red flags does not constitute a buy or sell recommendation. Past financial performance does not predict future results. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor.

**About EarningsGrade**: We screen earnings reports to help investors identify financial red flags. Our approach: "Screen out, not screen in." A passing grade means no red flags were detected — it does not mean the stock is a good investment.

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

General Dynamics (GD) FY2025 Earnings Quality Report — EarningsGrade