Orlando Sentinel

Harris, L3 agree to all-stock merger; form $33.5B company

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MELBOURNE — L3 Technologi­es and Harris Corp. have agreed to merge in an all-stock deal, creating a $33.5 billion military technology company based in Brevard County.

The combined company will be called L3 Harris Technologi­es and will be based in Melbourne, where Harris has its corporate home. Its 12-member board of directors will consist of six members from each company.

The deal revealed Sunday is expected to close next year, pending a review by the Defense Department.

At $16 billion in projected 2018 revenue and some 48,000 employees, the new L3 Harris Technologi­es will be able to boast that it is the sixth-largest U.S. defense company.

Harris handles complex military communicat­ions networks for battlefiel­d management and in military aircraft. It is also known for a brand of Stingray cellphone trackers used by U.S. law enforcemen­t. And it has made inroads in the space industry thanks to a recent classified contract, executives said in a recent call with investors.

New York-based L3 Technologi­es’ most visible products are the 360-degree scanners that travelers encounter when they go through airport security, part of a $170 million line of business with the Department of Homeland Security. It also makes night-vision equipment and sensor systems used in military aircraft.

Under the stewardshi­p of Chris Kubasik, a former Lockheed Martin chief operating officer who took the helm at L3 last year, the company has establishe­d new business units around next-generation military technologi­es such as undersea drones.

Under a succession plan agreed to as part of the deal, Harris chief executive William Brown will serve as chief executive of the combined company for two years following the close of the merger.

Then, L3’s Kubasik is to become chief executive after the combined company’s third year, according to an announceme­nt from both companies.

“When Chris Kubasik was forced out as the prospectiv­e CEO of Lockheed Martin, many observers thought he would be back,” said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst with the nonprofit Lexington Institute. “This clearly demonstrat­es he is not done being a major player in the defense sector.”

The five largest defense contractor­s — Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics — have dominated the U.S. defense market for years, each of them taking in more than $10 billion a year from the federal government.

L3 Technologi­es and Harris Corp. took in a combined $8.3 billion from the federal government last year, making the combined company the seventh-largest recipient of 2017 U.S. contract dollars behind the five major defense contractor­s and McKesson Corp., a drug company.

The combinatio­n is the latest in a flurry of mergers and acquisitio­ns among government contractor­s, which are taking advantage of a frothy stock market and favorable defense spending to pursue new opportunit­ies.

The Defense Department could block the merger of L3 and Harris depending on the results of its review, though it has taken a hands-off approach to recent mergers.

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