TLS Telos Corporation
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
Telos Corporation provides cybersecurity and identity-management products to US government and defense customers. The two strategic offerings are:
- Xacta — a continuous-compliance and risk-management platform for FedRAMP, RMF, and defense-environment authorization workflows. Xacta is deeply embedded in DoD and federal-civilian agency authorization pipelines.
- TSA PreCheck enrollment partnership — Telos operates approximately half of the TSA PreCheck enrollment locations in the US through a multi-year contract; revenue is per-enrollment plus the underlying program-management fee.
Revenue mix: government cybersecurity software-and-services plus identity-and-secure-credential services (PreCheck, biometric enrollment).
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The federal-cybersecurity-compliance market is structurally well-positioned:
- FedRAMP and RMF authorization demand grows as federal-cloud adoption deepens; Xacta is one of the few platforms specifically designed for this workflow
- TSA PreCheck enrollment expansion as PreCheck membership grows
- Defense and intelligence-community customers are sticky, high-margin, and budget-protected from broader federal cycles
Macro context: revenue growth of 52% YoY reflects the post-2023 contract-execution recovery after a stock decline cycle in 2021-2023 when Telos lost a major DHS contract.
REVENUE QUALITY
The economics reflect a federal-services business at meaningful scale:
- Gross margin 36.7% — moderate; lower than pure software because of the labor-intensive PreCheck enrollment operations mix
- Operating margin — improving but pressure from the labor-cost mix
- Revenue $165M TTM — meaningful absolute base
- P/S ~2 — reflects mid-recovery sentiment plus federal-budget-cycle pricing
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The defensible asset is Xacta's federal-authorization-pipeline depth plus the TSA PreCheck operating partnership:
- Xacta install-base in DoD, intel-community, and major civilian agencies — multi-year deployment with deep workflow integration
- TSA PreCheck partnership — limited number of authorized enrollment-provider partners, hard-to-replicate operating relationship
- Federal-clearance-eligible workforce — staff with security clearances are a structural barrier to entry
What it is not: a moat against Palantir or ServiceNow if either decided to attack federal-compliance management aggressively. Telos competes on focus and incumbency rather than feature-parity at scale.
GROWTH THESIS
Three things have to work:
- Xacta contract renewals + new agency wins compound. Each new agency authorization is a multi-year revenue stream.
- PreCheck enrollment volume grows with TSA membership expansion and 2026-mandated identity-verification requirements at airports.
- Margin recovery as labor-mix optimizes — the PreCheck operations are higher-revenue-per-enrollment than Xacta but lower-margin; rebalancing toward Xacta is the operating-leverage thesis.
KEY RISKS
Three specific risks:
-
Federal-budget-cycle pressure. Continuing-resolution dynamics and budget-cap negotiations affect federal IT spending unpredictably.
-
PreCheck program-revision risk. TSA program changes (additional providers, reimbursement cuts, eligibility changes) could compress the PreCheck operating segment.
-
Single-agency-loss precedent. Telos lost a meaningful DHS contract in 2021-2022 that pressured the stock for two years; concentration on a small number of large agency contracts is the structural fragility.
VERDICT
The 81.0/100 score captures the post-recovery growth and operational improvement. The cheapness reflects single-customer-concentration risk plus federal-cycle-overhang pricing.
For investors who want federal-cybersecurity exposure with TSA-program optionality at small-cap scale, TLS is one of few liquid pure-plays. For investors needing scale or short-cycle revenue visibility, the federal-program concentration is the legitimate concern.
The single metric to watch next is Xacta annual recurring revenue (ARR) growth disclosed in earnings. Continued ARR compounding signals the federal-authorization-platform thesis is durable; a slowdown signals contract-renewal pressure.
Report last updated: May 5, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.