Armor business expands
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Andrew Edwards
A Costa Mesa manufacturer of body armor announced Tuesday the opening
of a plant in Michigan to design prototypes for armored vehicles.
Ceradyne, Inc. opened the plant in Wixom, Mich., to be near the
automotive industry and the Army Tank-automotive and Armaments
Command, said Joel Moscowitz, Ceradyne chairman, president and chief
executive. In the past six months, the company inked contracts with
Ford Motor Co., the Department of Defense and other parties whom
Moscowitz said he could not disclose. Ceradyne has a five-year
agreement with Ford to provide armor for the Lincoln Town Car
Ballistic Protection System -- a luxury car with armor designed to
protect traveling dignitaries. Ceradyne is set to earn $12,000 for
each armored car that Ford sells.
Ceradyne’s contract with the defense department calls for the
company to manufacture armored Humvee seats, Moscowitz said. The
company plans to use a design similar to one already used in attack
helicopters. Other contracts call for Ceradyne to design prototypes
for vehicles designed to employ armor composed of ceramic plates and
Kevlar.
“We believe that ceramics are a natural solution for vehicle
armor; it’s 50% the weight of steel,” Ceradyne Chief Financial
Officer Jerrold G. Pellizzon said while speaking at a conference in
New York City on Tuesday. Pellizzon’s remarks were aired on the Web.
There are about 9,200 tactical trucks deployed in Iraq, and less
than 15% of those are armored, Pellizzon said, calling the trucks
slow-moving targets for terrorists.
Ceradyne had already been supplying personal body armor for the
military and has a backlog of about $150-million worth of body armor
orders, Moscowitz said. Body armor orders have recently increased due
to the controversy over whether troops fighting in Iraq and
Afghanistan have enough armored vests.
“We’re running 24 hours a day,” Moscowitz said. Ceradyne produces
about 25,000 ceramic body armor plates a month.
Ceradyne’s stock price fell 2.87% Tuesday, closing at $52.47 a
share. The company trades under the NASDAQ ticker CRDN. Through the
third quarter of 2004, the firm reported more than $56 million in
sales and close to $18 million in profits.
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