ManTech International

Last edited by crocodyl on May 23, 2008 - 9:41am
Ownership status: 
Publicly traded
Number of employees worldwide: 
7,300
Chief executive officer: 
George J. Pedersen
Tel: 
703-218-6000
Fax: 
703-218-8296
Company Snapshot: 

ManTech International, a leading beneficiary of U.S. government spending for the “war on terrorism,” started out as a specialized military contractor that devised war-game models and later began offering a wide range of professional services to various federal agencies. Since the 9/11 attacks, ManTech has grown nearly fourfold mostly by providing information technology and systems engineering services to intelligence agencies and the Pentagon, which together account for more than 90 percent of its revenue. ManTech reached its position mainly by acquiring a series of other contractors with close ties to those sectors of the federal government.

ManTech also sought to be a leading provider of background checks and security clearances for the federal government, but that business did not perform to the satisfaction of investors and was sold to ManTech’s chief executive.

ManTech, which had a contract backlog of $3.2 billion at the end of 2007, has cemented its ties to the Washington establishment by naming to its board of directors the likes of retired admiral David E. Jeremiah, former vice chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage. One of the company’s top officers has been Eugene Renzi, a retired Army general and father of Rep. Rick Renzi of Arizona.

Corporate accountability
Accountability overview: 

In late 2002 ManTech disclosed in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that the company was being investigated by the Defense Department in connection with billing irregularities related to a contract to perform security clearances and background checks. The company later announced it was firing several employees and was not itself charged in the matter.

ManTech also disclosed in the filing that it was being investigated by the Environmental Protection Agency for similar reasons. It avoided prosecution in this matter as well.

The company has made good use of the revolving door by recruiting retired military officers and former federal officials as directors and senior managers.

Labor: 

In 2006 ManTech agreed to pay $131,165 in back wages to 31 employees after a U.S. Labor Department investigation determined that the workers’ jobs at Ft. Knox, Kentucky had been misclassified, causing them to be paid less than required under the Service Contract Act.

Environment and product safety: 

In June 2001, CHBP, Ltd., a customer of ManTech’s environmental consulting and remediation business, filed suit in Texas against ManTech and other parties alleged to have caused soil and groundwater contamination while occupying a commercial business center owned by CHBP. In November 2003, ManTech settled the case out of court and decided to discontinue the environmental operation.

Location(s)

Headquarters
12015 Lee Jackson Highway
Fairfax, VA, 22033
United States
See map: Google Maps
History

ManTech was founded in New Jersey in 1968 by George Pedersen and Franc Wertheimer. They started off with a contract from the U.S. Navy to build sophisticated war-gaming models for submarines. The company was little known outside the Pentagon until 1988, when it agreed to purchase a subsidiary of Northrop Corp. that provided technical and management support to federal agencies such as NASA and the Environmental Protection Agency. A Washington Post article later that year reported that ManTech, then privately held, was regarded as “something of a mystery” and that its chairman and co-founder George Pedersen did not let himself be photographed.

Before the Northrop deal, ManTech grew largely by acquiring obscure professional services and engineering firms such as Mathetics Corp. and Energystics Corp. Later, ManTech expanded its military and national-security presence by purchasing companies such as Aegis Research Corp. ManTech, which held an initial public offering of stock in 2002, continued to grow by acquisition. It bought technical services company CTX Corp. in 2002, software integration company Integrated Data Systems in 2003, and background investigations company MSM Security Services also in 2003.

ManTech’s stock price plunged more than 30 percent in 2004 when investors realized that the revenue stream from a new background-check contract it won thanks to the MSM acquisition would not be as rapid as expected. Later that year, the company announced the layoff of about 100 employees and posted a quarterly loss.

ManTech rebounded in early 2005 with the announcement that a joint venture it led had been awarded a $209 million contract by the U.S. Army to provide “multi-disciplined intelligence and security support.” The company sold off its environmental services business but acquired intelligence contractor Gray Hawk Systems for $100 million. In January 2006 ManTech was chosen to be the lead subcontractor on a $300 million contract to provide logistics services to the Army in Iraq and Afghanistan. Several months later, the company was one of five contractors awarded a $4 billion blanket purchase agreement from the U.S. Agency for International Development for information technology services. ManTech was then named by Lucent Technologies as a subcontractor on a $4 billion contract to upgrade the Army’s communications infrastructure.

In 2007 ManTech received a contract worth up to $159 million to help the Army with mine-clearing work in Afghanistan, Iraq and Kuwait by maintaining equipment and providing training. It went on to receive other awards such as a contract to maintain tanks at various Army bases around the United States and another from the Defense Department to support “interagency anti-terrorism missions.”

In February 2007, ManTech announced that its troubled MSM Security Services operation would be sold to ManTech chief executive George Pedersen for $3 million. In May 2007 ManTech completed the acquisition of SRS Technologies, a provider of systems engineering services to intelligence, military and homeland security agencies. And in November 2007 ManTech announced plans to acquire McDonald Bradley, an information technology provider to the same sectors served by SRS.

Financial information
Stock ticker symbol: 
MANT
Total revenue: 
$1.4 billion
Fiscal year: 
2007
Net Income: 
$67.2 million
Fiscal year: 
2007
Major lines of business/segments: 

The company describes its operations as follows: " ManTech is a leading provider of innovative technologies and solutions for mission-critical national security programs for the Intelligence Community, the Departments of Defense, State, Homeland Security, and Justice, and other U.S. federal government agencies. Our expertise includes engineering, systems integration, software services, enterprise architecture, information assurance and security architecture, intelligence operations and analysis support, network and critical infrastructure protection, information operations and computer forensics, information technology, communications integration and engineering support and global logistics and supply chain management."

Additional descriptive data
Specialized Information