Input: 2004 starts slow for big contracts
High-value federal information technology and command and control contract awards totaled just $6.7 billion in January 2004, a decline from a year earlier.
High-value federal information technology and command and control contract awards totaled just $6.7 billion in January 2004, a decline from January 2003. But contract awards should increase soon, according to a report from Reston, Va.-based researcher Input.
According to the report, January 2004 contract awards slowed year-over-year and versus the previous months.
Input tracked 26 new high-value program awards in the federal sector in January 2004, vs. 46 program awards the previous year. For October, November and December 2003, high-value contract awards totaled $7.7 billion, $7.4 billion and $17.5 billion, respectively.
Input classifies any contract with an award value over $1 million as a high-value contract.
"While January 2004 was slow in terms of overall activity, some vendors benefited from market-shaping trends," said Meredith Luttner, manager of public sector operations at Input.
The report identified several key program awards that were significant for their high monetary values and strong connection to federal government market trends.
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