By Doug Cameron 

Raytheon Co. said Thursday that its big push into commercial cyberspace services would pay off a year ahead of schedule, even as rival defense contractors bailed out of the sector because of tough competition.

The maker of Patriot missile-defense systems in May paid $1.6 billion for control of Websense Inc. and combined it with its government-focused cyberbusiness in an effort to cross-sell to customers seeking protection from a dizzying array of Internet threats.

At the time, the deal was the largest defense acquisition in a decade and followed more than a dozen smaller purchases, but met with skepticism from some investors and analysts, with Raytheon shares underperforming peers amid concerns the company would find it tough to secure profitable growth.

However, Raytheon said the cyberventure would be accretive in two to three years, 12 months earlier than expected. Its shares were recently up 7.7% at $104.53.

"It's not as dilutive as we thought," Chief Financial Officer Toby O'Brien said of Websense in an interview after Raytheon reported forecast-beating quarterly earnings. It also lifted its full-year sales forecast, targeting a rise of up to 2% from 2014, reversing annual declines stretching back to 2010. Mr. O'Brien said the return to growth was a year ahead of its prior expectations.

Raytheon is the Pentagon's fourth-largest supplier by revenue and a closely watched barometer of the industry's health because of its relatively large overseas exposure, a run of domestic contract wins and its efforts to tap commercial as well as core defense markets.

The cyber push has attracted even more scrutiny as rivals gave up on their own efforts to leverage their prowess in military and intelligence markets into winning deals for customers such as banks and utilities. Lockheed Martin Corp. this week announced plans to sell or spin off its commercial cyberbusiness, and Boeing Co. and General Dynamics have already exited a segment both built through acquisitions.

Defense companies have found they lack the sales skills to tap nongovernment clients and lacked the scale of some established commercial operators such as Symantec Corp. and FireEye Inc. to do so.

Raytheon Chief Executive Tom Kennedy said there was pent-up demand from commercial and government customers for what he called defense-grade cyber solutions, with Websense's main product having double-digit sales growth in the June quarter.

Patriot sales have been boosted by tensions in the Middle East, and international orders climbed to a record 46% of its backlog at the end of the quarter, boosted by around $7 billion in deals for the Patriot booked in recent months.

With international sales growing at midsingle-digit levels and U.S. business flat or slightly down this year, Mr. O'Brien said he expected domestic sales to turn up again late next year or in early 2017.

His comments came as Raytheon said profit from continuing operations rose to $504 million from $499 million, with per-share earnings climbing to $1.65 from $1.59, above analysts' expectations.

The company trimmed its 2015 earnings guidance to a range of $6.47 to $6.62 from $6.67 to $6.82 to reflect the Websense deal, ahead of analysts' expectations, and boosted its share-buyback plan.

The company raised its 2015 sales guidance by $400 million, with Austin, Texas-based Websense expected to add an extra $100 million and the unit that builds the Patriot missile-defense system boosting revenue by an additional $300 million.

Patriot sales helped lift revenue by 2.8% to $5.85 billion in the quarter, with $7.6 billion in orders boosting its book-to-bill ratio to 1.3.

Write to Doug Cameron at doug.cameron@wsj.com

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