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Lockheed Martin () is a leading aerospace manufacturer and advanced technology company formed in 1995 by the merger of Lockheed Corporation with Martin Marietta. It is headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, a community in Montgomery County, Maryland, and employs 135,000 people worldwide. Robert J. Stevens is the current Chairman, President, and CEO.
Lockheed Martin is the world's largest defense contractor (by defense revenue). As of 2005, 95% of Lockheed Martin's revenues came from the U.S. Department of Defense, other U.S. federal government agencies, and foreign military customers.
Lockheed Martin
History
Lockheed
Martin Marietta
Satellites
Corporate governance
Aeronautics
Electronic Systems
Information & Technology Services
Integrated Systems & Solutions
Space Systems
Others
Joint Ventures
Facts
See also
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History

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Shortly after the creation of the company Lockheed Martin acquired the majority of Loral Corporation's defense electronics and system integration businesses for $9.1 billion. The remainder of Loral became Loral Space & Communications.
In 1998, Lockheed Martin abandoned plans to merge with Northrop Grumman due to government concerns over the potential strength of the new group (Lockheed/Northrop would have had control of 25% of the DoD's procurement budget).
In 2000, Lockheed agreed to pay a $13 million settlement to the US government for breaching the arms export control act. The company passed information to AsiaSat, a major shareholder of which is the Chinese government. In November 2000 Lockheed completed the sale of its Aerospace Electronic Systems business to BAE Systems for $1.67 billion USD.
Lockheed Martin won the contract to build the Joint Strike Fighter in 2001 with its F-35 design. This is the most important fighter aircraft procurement project since the F-16, with an initial order of 3,000 worth $200 billion before export orders.
In 2003, Lockheed Martin benefited from a USAF decision to punish Boeing for conducting industrial espionage against its rival. The USAF revoked $1 billion worth of contracts from Boeing and awarded them to Lockheed Martin. The company sued Boeing in 1998 for stealing documents related to a military contract.
It was recently reported in the Washington Post that when Robert Stevens took control of Lockheed Martin in 2004, he faced the dilemma that within 10 years 100,000 of the about 130,000 Lockheed Martin employees would be retiring.
In 2006, Lockheed Corporation won a 3.9 billion dollar contract from NASA on August 31 to design and build the nation’s next spaceship for human flight, a craft called Orion.
Lockheed Martin was formed by a "merger of equals". Below are examples of the products each company contributed to the current portfolio:
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Lockheed
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Martin Marietta
Transfer Orbit Stage (under subcontract to Orbital Sciences Corporation)
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Satellites
Tiros-N meteorological satellites
Vinasat 1 (making is in progress)
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Corporate governance
Current members of the board of directors of Lockheed Martin are: Edward Aldridge, Nolan Archibald, Marcus Bennett, James O. Ellis, Gwendolyn King, James Loy, Douglas McCorkindale, Eugene Murphy, Joseph Ralston, Frank Savage, Anne Stevens, Robert J. Stevens, James Ukropina, and Douglas Yearley.
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Aeronautics
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Electronic Systems
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Information & Technology Services
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Integrated Systems & Solutions
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Space Systems
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Others
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Joint Ventures
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Facts
The firm's name, "Lockheed Martin," is sometimes colloquially abbreviated as "LockMart".*
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See also
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