Federal Analysis
DoD Expands Direct OEM Contracting in Missouri
March 19, 2026
The Department of Defense has significantly increased a contract with Salesforce's Computable Insights subsidiary from $99 million to $5.6 billion as of January 2026, directly engaging the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) and bypassing traditional value-added resellers (VARs) such as Carahsoft. This shift in procurement strategy is consolidating market power among OEMs and raising concerns about reduced competition, pricing pressures, and supply chain resilience within the defense sector. Concurrently, new executive pay and dividend restrictions introduced by the administration are beginning to influence defense contractors' corporate behavior and contract negotiations, although immediate impacts on earnings and stock performance remain limited.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate increased direct OEM engagements, which may alter vendor relationships and contract structures, particularly in Missouri where this large Army contract is centered.
- The consolidation trend could reduce the number of market participants, potentially affecting competition and pricing dynamics, as noted by industry analysts.
- Defense contractors and suppliers should evaluate how executive pay restrictions might influence contract negotiations and corporate strategies moving forward.
- Organizations involved in defense procurement should assess supply chain risks associated with bypassing VARs and plan accordingly to maintain resilience and compliance.
The overall decline in market participants over time will have a deleterious effect on competition and pricing.
— Paul Murphy, Senior data analyst at Bloomberg Government
Agencies
Department of Defense, General Services Administration, U.S. Treasury
Vendors
Salesforce, Carahsoft, Lockheed, Boeing, RTX
Contracts
$5.6 billion
Locations
Sources
- Exec pay restrictions swaying defense sector outlookβdespite still-unclear impact | Federal News Network · Federal News Network · Mar 19