CACI Wins Two Defense Department Network Services Deals
A privatization parasite.
What is CACI's customer mix of business?
In FY05
72.7% of CACI's revenue came from the DoD
21.6% from federal civilian agencies (e.g., Department of Justice, FAA)
4.2% from commercial sources
1.5% from state and local government customers
What were CACI's FY05 revenue and income?
For the full fiscal year, revenue increased 42% to $1.62B, versus $1.15B of revenue for FY04. Approximately 16% of the revenue growth was organic and across a broad base of Department of Defense, intelligence and federal civilian agency customers. The remaining 26% of the revenue growth was from acquisitions. Operating income increased 44% to $151.1M compared with $104.7M in FY04.
Net income for FY05 was $85.3M, or $2.79 per diluted share, an increase of 34% over net income of $63.7M, or $2.13 per diluted share, reported in FY04. The company's operating margin increased to 9.3% for the year, up from 9.1% during FY04. Net cash provided by operations for FY05 was a record $137M, an increase of 81% from FY04.
What are CACI's total assets?
As of June 30, 2005, the end of FY05, CACI's total assets were $1.204B.
CACI Wins Two Defense Department Network Services Deals
2005-10-27
Newsbytes
By Ethan Butterfield, Contributing Staff Writer
The Defense Department has awarded two one-year contracts totaling $19.8 million to CACI International Inc. of Arlington, Va., to provide managed network services for the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
The first contract is for $15.2 million to support two OSD offices and to provide overall enterprise architecture. The second contract is a $4.6 million project to support four other OSD components.
Both projects support OSD transformation initiatives to consolidate IT services and will standardize services for classified and unclassified networks that include systems directly supporting homeland security and the war on terrorism.
The OSD is the principal staff element of the secretary of Defense in the exercise of policy development, planning, resource management, fiscal and program evaluation responsibilities. It includes 17 separate components, each with differing IT contracts and levels of support.
CACI will work on standardization and integration across six components and 7,000 users. The company will support networks ranging from business management to homeland security, disaster recovery and the war on terrorism.
Ethan Butterfield is a staff writer for Government Computer News' sister publication, Washington Technology.
Reported By GCN Daily Updates, http://www.gcn.com
What is CACI's customer mix of business?
In FY05
72.7% of CACI's revenue came from the DoD
21.6% from federal civilian agencies (e.g., Department of Justice, FAA)
4.2% from commercial sources
1.5% from state and local government customers
What were CACI's FY05 revenue and income?
For the full fiscal year, revenue increased 42% to $1.62B, versus $1.15B of revenue for FY04. Approximately 16% of the revenue growth was organic and across a broad base of Department of Defense, intelligence and federal civilian agency customers. The remaining 26% of the revenue growth was from acquisitions. Operating income increased 44% to $151.1M compared with $104.7M in FY04.
Net income for FY05 was $85.3M, or $2.79 per diluted share, an increase of 34% over net income of $63.7M, or $2.13 per diluted share, reported in FY04. The company's operating margin increased to 9.3% for the year, up from 9.1% during FY04. Net cash provided by operations for FY05 was a record $137M, an increase of 81% from FY04.
What are CACI's total assets?
As of June 30, 2005, the end of FY05, CACI's total assets were $1.204B.
CACI Wins Two Defense Department Network Services Deals
2005-10-27
Newsbytes
By Ethan Butterfield, Contributing Staff Writer
The Defense Department has awarded two one-year contracts totaling $19.8 million to CACI International Inc. of Arlington, Va., to provide managed network services for the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
The first contract is for $15.2 million to support two OSD offices and to provide overall enterprise architecture. The second contract is a $4.6 million project to support four other OSD components.
Both projects support OSD transformation initiatives to consolidate IT services and will standardize services for classified and unclassified networks that include systems directly supporting homeland security and the war on terrorism.
The OSD is the principal staff element of the secretary of Defense in the exercise of policy development, planning, resource management, fiscal and program evaluation responsibilities. It includes 17 separate components, each with differing IT contracts and levels of support.
CACI will work on standardization and integration across six components and 7,000 users. The company will support networks ranging from business management to homeland security, disaster recovery and the war on terrorism.
Ethan Butterfield is a staff writer for Government Computer News' sister publication, Washington Technology.
Reported By GCN Daily Updates, http://www.gcn.com
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