Honeywell International shares currently sit at $205.88, reflecting a 4.6% decline as market participants evaluate the implications of the company’s forthcoming division. The diversified industrial corporation will separate into two distinct publicly traded entities—Honeywell Aerospace (HONA) and Honeywell Technologies (HON)—with the transition scheduled for market open on June 29, 2026.
Honeywell International Inc., HON
Concurrently, management will implement a 1-for-2 reverse stock split on the identical date, proportionally adjusting existing shareholder holdings.
Market observers are noting striking parallels to General Electric’s 2024 restructuring. Following that separation, GE Aerospace delivered 84% appreciation, while GE Vernova skyrocketed more than 550%. Honeywell executives and numerous sell-side analysts anticipate a comparable valuation expansion scenario.
Investors have two strategic options: acquire shares now to receive both successor entities, or wait until post-June 30 to selectively invest in their preferred business.
Honeywell Aerospace will commence trading under ticker symbol HONA. This segment recorded $17.4 billion in revenue during 2025, representing 12% year-over-year expansion, while achieving operating margins approaching 25%. By contrast, aerospace and defense companies within the Russell 1000 average approximately 17% margins.
Projections indicate operating income will exceed $6.5 billion by decade’s end, expanding at roughly 8% annually. GE Aerospace, as a reference point, anticipates operating profit growth closer to 11% per year.
Should Honeywell Aerospace’s trajectory align more closely with GE’s performance, its valuation multiple could experience substantial expansion. GE Aerospace currently commands approximately 40x forward earnings. Honeywell presently trades around 19x—a disparity that optimistic observers believe should narrow following separation.
Challenges remain, however. Jefferies analyst Sheila Kahyaoglu highlighted recent operational delays relative to supplier schedules. Management recruited Katherine Worthen as chief supply chain officer to resolve bottlenecks. Capital Alpha Partners analyst Byron Callan indicated the “objective is enhanced supplier collaboration to eliminate scheduling disruptions.”
Even applying conservative peer-group valuations, Honeywell Aerospace warrants approximately $120 billion in market capitalization. Current shareholders will receive one HONA share for every two HON shares owned.
Honeywell Technologies will continue under the HON ticker symbol, encompassing building systems, process automation, and industrial control operations. Its integrated platforms serve approximately 10 million structures globally.
Operating as a standalone entity in 2026, projections indicate revenue between $19.9B–$20.2B with earnings per share ranging from $3.95–$4.15.
Goldman Sachs analyst Joe Ritchie estimates the automation operations at roughly $85 billion, translating to approximately $125 per share after accounting for debt obligations. This valuation implies approximately 30x projected 2026 earnings.
BNP Paribas analyst Andrew Buscaglia characterized market expectations as “comparatively modest” ahead of Honeywell Technologies’ June 11 Investor Day, anticipating management will outline low-double-digit earnings growth objectives for upcoming fiscal periods.
Quantinuum, the company’s quantum computing investment, contributes roughly $10 per split-adjusted share following its successful $1.68 billion initial public offering.
Wall Street consensus currently comprises 13 Buy recommendations, 9 Hold ratings, and 1 Sell opinion, with a mean price objective of $246.63.
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