Swedish defence group Saab reported a marginally smaller-than-expected rise in third-quarter profit on Friday and raised sales guidance on the back of soaring military spending.
Operating profit at the company was up 16 per cent from a year earlier to 1.37 billion crowns ($146 million) against a mean forecast of 1.38 billion in an LSEG poll of analysts, on organic sales growth of 18 per cent.
Saab is scaling up production amid soaring military spending in Europe due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
The spending boom, further underlined by NATO members committing to defence budget increases demanded by US President Donald Trump, has lifted stocks of military equipment makers, with Saab's shares soaring 111 per cent this year alone by Thursday's close.
"Market activity was high and demand was strong," CEO Micael Johansson said in the report. "We are well positioned to capture growth opportunities. In parallel, we are increasing investments in new technology and research and development", he said.
Saab, whose products range from missiles and advanced electronics to submarines, raised its like-for-like full-year sales growth forecast to 20-24 per cent, even as order intake shrank slightly in the quarter. Its previous forecast, from July, was for 16-20 per cent growth.
It reiterated that it expects operating profit to rise even faster than sales.
Order bookings amounted to 20.9 billion crowns in the quarter and the order backlog stood at 202.4 billion.
(Reporting by Johan Ahlander, editing by Anna Ringstrom)