Next Investors logo grey

WhiteHawk locks in US Defense supply chain Cyber Risk Radar contract

|

Published 12-NOV-2019 14:17 P.M.

|

4 minute read

Hey! Looks like you have stumbled on the section of our website where we have archived articles from our old business model.

In 2019 the original founding team returned to run Next Investors, we changed our business model to only write about stocks we carefully research and are invested in for the long term.

The below articles were written under our previous business model. We have kept these articles online here for your reference.

Our new mission is to build a high performing ASX micro cap investment portfolio and share our research, analysis and investment strategy with our readers.


Click Here to View Latest Articles

WhiteHawk Limited (ASX:WHK) today announced the extension and expansion of a contract to provide its Cyber Risk Radar to a top 12 US defense industrial base (DIB) company for supply chain risk management.

WhiteHawk is the first global online cyber security exchange enabling small-to-medium businesses — those with revenues of up to US$1 billion — to take smart action against cybercrime. Its Cyber Risk Radar, formerly the 360 Cyber Risk Framework, for supply chain and vendor companies, monitors, identifies, prioritises, and mitigates cyber risks across third party suppliers and vendors.

The DIB company is a large tier 1 organisation, but due to sensitivity of Cybersecurity Risk focused work WhiteHawk cannot reveal its name at this stage.

This deal, which has been in the works for over a year, establishes an annual subscription supply chain cyber risk management program for 150 suppliers/vendors of the DIB company and over US$500,000.

WhiteHawk will now establish a permanent program with the DIB company after the pair entered an initial contract in December 2018, which was then extended in June 2019.

This top 12 DIB company has contracted with WhiteHawk to implement a comprehensive Cyber Risk Radar, including provisioning of an integrated online Software as a Service (SaaS) subscription augmented by consulting services.

Through quarterly reporting, the customer will establish a Cyber Risk Rating baseline for its key supplier companies on US federal contracts via continuous monitoring, alerts, prioritisation and mitigation of business and cyber risks across three tiers of suppliers and vendors, in near real time. This will provide intelligence into the cyber health and status of the customer’s suppliers in advance of tightening government benchmarks and requirements.

The customer will receive quarterly WhiteHawk Cyber Risk Scorecards for 150 critical suppliers and Risk Portfolio Reports across the entire population of suppliers. These reports, developed by WhiteHawk, summarise key findings and make prioritised recommendations for each supplier company to measurably advance their cyber maturity.

The customer will also maintain access to a comprehensive business ecosystem dashboard that includes business, technical, and security risks. This gives the customer the ability to view and monitor the identified suppliers’ cyber security risk ratings, business risk scores, and WhiteHawk Cyber Risk Scorecards in a single location.

Terry Roberts, Executive Chair of WhiteHawk, commented, “This opportunity to demonstrate at scale our integration and prioritisation of commercial cyber risk monitoring and mitigation across 150 US Department of Defense cyber organisations and professionals is something we have worked to achieve for over a year.

“With the expansion of this contract we can now showcase how new Department of Defense supply chain cyber risk objectives, guidelines and certifications can be automated across thousands of Defense Contractors and Suppliers as never before.”

US Defense industry prioritises cybersecurity

Today’s contract extension, in conjunction with WhiteHawk’s top 5 finish in DIB outreach challenge, solidifies WhiteHawk’s presence in the US Defense industry, which is in severe need of supply chain cyber risk mitigation services.

The US Department of Defense (DoD) is currently embarking upon an ambitious schedule for a serious overhaul of the way it monitors and enforces cybersecurity within its industrial base.

The DoD is working on a tiered cybersecurity framework, the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC), under which contractors will have to abide by depending on the sensitivity of systems they’re charged with protecting.

This comes as the US finds itself in strategic competition against actors such as Russia and China — nations that have sought to exfiltrate the data of US Defense contractors, especially smaller companies at the lowest levels.

The National Security Agency’s (NSA) Gen. Paul Nakasone explained, “We must better protect our nation’s advantage and the Defense sector from intellectual property theft. This means working closely with the Defense industries and those who provide cybersecurity solutions to them.”



General Information Only

S3 Consortium Pty Ltd (S3, ‘we’, ‘us’, ‘our’) (CAR No. 433913) is a corporate authorised representative of LeMessurier Securities Pty Ltd (AFSL No. 296877). The information contained in this article is general information and is for informational purposes only. Any advice is general advice only. Any advice contained in this article does not constitute personal advice and S3 has not taken into consideration your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Please seek your own independent professional advice before making any financial investment decision. Those persons acting upon information contained in this article do so entirely at their own risk.

Conflicts of Interest Notice

S3 and its associated entities may hold investments in companies featured in its articles, including through being paid in the securities of the companies we provide commentary on. We disclose the securities held in relation to a particular company that we provide commentary on. Refer to our Disclosure Policy for information on our self-imposed trading blackouts, hold conditions and de-risking (sell conditions) which seek to mitigate against any potential conflicts of interest.

Publication Notice and Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is current as at the publication date. At the time of publishing, the information contained in this article is based on sources which are available in the public domain that we consider to be reliable, and our own analysis of those sources. The views of the author may not reflect the views of the AFSL holder. Any decision by you to purchase securities in the companies featured in this article should be done so after you have sought your own independent professional advice regarding this information and made your own inquiries as to the validity of any information in this article.

Any forward-looking statements contained in this article are not guarantees or predictions of future performance, and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are beyond our control, and which may cause actual results or performance of companies featured to differ materially from those expressed in the statements contained in this article. S3 cannot and does not give any assurance that the results or performance expressed or implied by any forward-looking statements contained in this article will actually occur and readers are cautioned not to put undue reliance on forward-looking statements.

This article may include references to our past investing performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of our future investing performance.