Honeywell Aerospace began trading as an independent publicly traded company under the ticker HONA on the Nasdaq on June 29, marking the latest milestone in Honeywell International’s plan to separate into three standalone businesses focused on aerospace, industrial automation, and advanced materials.
Honeywell first announced the three-way breakup in 2025 as part of a strategy to create more focused companies with independent capital allocation and operating priorities. The aerospace business now joins other major standalone aviation suppliers, including GE Aerospace, as large industrial conglomerates continue to streamline their portfolios around specialized businesses.
Honeywell Aerospace enters the public market as one of the world’s largest tier-one aerospace and defense suppliers, employing more than 36,000 people and serving more than 10,000 customers worldwide. Its portfolio includes aircraft engines, avionics, navigation and communications systems, flight controls, propulsion technologies, and defense electronics used by commercial aircraft manufacturers, airlines, space programs, and military customers. Major customers include Boeing, Airbus, and the U.S. Department of Defense.
The company’s market debut comes amid strong investor interest in aerospace and defence companies, fueled by sustained commercial aircraft production demand, expanding military budgets, and efforts by governments to strengthen domestic defense industrial capacity. Earlier this year, Honeywell Aerospace agreed to invest $500 million under a Pentagon initiative to expand production capacity for precision-guided missiles and munitions, joining other major defence contractors in increasing U.S. manufacturing capability.
Honeywell Aerospace has also outlined ambitious financial targets, telling investors earlier this month that it expects adjusted earnings to reach approximately $6.5 billion by 2030, supported by continued demand from commercial aviation and defence markets.
Defence budgets are expanding, commercial aviation demand remains strong, and Washington is actively pushing to rebuild domestic industrial capacity for precision munitions and defense electronics. A focused, independent Honeywell Aerospace, unencumbered by the priorities of an industrial conglomerate, can move faster on acquisitions, partnerships, and production commitments — as its $500 million Pentagon munitions investment already signals. For government customers, that means a key tier-one supplier with direct lines into Boeing, Airbus, and the Department of Defense is now structured to be more responsive, more acquisitive, and more strategically aligned with national security priorities than it was inside the old Honeywell umbrella.
Source: Defense and Security Monitor