Science Applications International Corporation Q4 2026 Earnings Call Summary
-
Management is intentionally deemphasizing ‘commoditized’ cost-plus enterprise IT work where differentiation is difficult and customer retention is lower.
-
Performance in Q4 was hampered by procurement delays and customer disruptions, though margins remained resilient due to aggressive cost-management efforts.
-
The company is executing an ‘addition by subtraction’ strategy in business development, focusing resources on a $25B-$28B pipeline with higher ‘right to win’ potential.
-
A new bottoms-up enterprise transformation initiative is underway to eliminate ‘gunk’ from legacy processes and increase investment capacity for innovation.
-
Strategic focus is shifting toward mission-critical engineering and AI-enabled solutions, leveraging the SilverEdge acquisition to serve intelligence customers.
-
Management attributes recent organic contraction primarily to recompete losses in large enterprise IT, a segment expected to shrink from 17% to 10% of revenue by FY2027.
-
FY 2027 guidance assumes an organic revenue contraction of 2% to 4%, primarily driven by approximately $400 million in previously disclosed recompete losses.
-
The company is guiding to a 10% adjusted EBITDA margin at the midpoint for the first time, supported by $100 million in targeted cost reductions.
-
Revenue projections assume a ramp-up of new business wins to $500 million in FY 2027, though management notes a potential run rate exceeding $800 million if budget uncertainty eases.
-
The guidance framework is described as conservative, requiring ‘no heroics’ or significant new ‘go-get’ wins to achieve the midpoint targets.
-
Management expects the trailing book-to-bill ratio to improve throughout the year as the company shifts from ‘defense’ to ‘offense’ on new captures.
-
The Department of State Vanguard program remains the largest single recompete risk, though management expresses high confidence due to a 15-year incumbency.
-
FY 2027 free cash flow guidance includes a $70 million nonrecurring cash tax benefit from recent legislation.
-
Resource constraints within government procurement functions continue to slow the ramp-up of several large existing contract wins.
-
The transition from interim to permanent CEO is intended to provide leadership continuity and focus on long-term strategy over day-to-day management.
Our analysts just identified a stock with the potential to be the next Nvidia. Tell us how you invest and we’ll show you why it’s our #1 pick. Tap here.
Story Continues
-
Management is moving away from ‘vanilla’ enterprise IT toward AI-enabled classified networks and intellectual property-driven solutions.
-
The strategy involves prioritizing areas where customer retention is a reward for innovation rather than just low cost.
-
Current CapEx of $35 million is deemed adequate, but management is prepared to ‘flex’ and spend more if customers signal a need for increased weapons production.
-
Investment is also being directed into ‘mission labs’ and a ‘Mission Data Platform’ that do not always appear on the CapEx line.
-
Changes to the proposal process and win-rate discipline are expected to impact results within six months.
-
Win rates for new business in non-enterprise IT segments (engineering and mission IT) have recently approached or exceeded 50%.
-
Management observes ‘tremendous urgency’ for procurement reform to improve speed, likely leading to more use of Other Transaction Authority (OTA) vehicles.
-
SAIC is utilizing its commercial operating segment to meet customer demands for faster, commercial-style contracting.
One stock. Nvidia-level potential. 30M+ investors trust Moby to find it first. Get the pick. Tap here.

