Honeywell Aerospace made its Nasdaq debut on Monday, with the stock opening at $236.78 — up 7% from its when-issued close of $221.01 last week.
Honeywell Aerospace Inc. Common Stock When Issued, HONAV
The listing marks a key milestone in Honeywell’s planned three-way split, which was announced in 2025. The parent company is breaking itself into three standalone businesses: automation, aerospace, and advanced materials. The full separation is expected to wrap up this year.
HONA makes engines, electronics, and systems used in commercial and military aircraft and spacecraft. Its customers include Boeing, Airbus, major airlines, and the U.S. military.
The spin-off draws an obvious comparison to GE Aerospace, which went through its own conglomerate breakup. The logic in both cases is the same: focused, leaner businesses tend to perform better than sprawling ones.
Not everyone is rushing to buy in, though. RBC analyst Ken Herbert pointed out that under legacy Honeywell reporting, HONA “significantly underperformed its peers in aftermarket growth, largely due to execution and supply chain challenges.”
Herbert does see a path forward. He believes better execution and a sharper focus on Retrofit, Migration, and Upgrade Programs — what the industry calls RMUs — can support improved aftermarket pricing power.
On the day of the debut, TD Cowen initiated coverage with a Hold rating and a $250 price target. The firm noted that HONA offers adjusted operating profit growth below 10%, built on roughly 8% organic sales growth, minimal margin expansion, and a flat share count.
That’s a steady, if unspectacular, growth profile — not the kind of number that gets traders excited, but enough to support the valuation for patient investors.
The debut lands at a time when aerospace and defense assets are drawing real investor attention. Pent-up demand for aircraft parts, combined with rising global military budgets, has put the sector in focus.
Earlier this year, President Trump met with munitions makers including Honeywell Aerospace as part of a push to ramp up U.S. weapons production. Military stockpiles were drawn down during operations in Iran and other recent conflicts, and Washington is looking to rebuild them.
That context gives HONA a potential demand driver that goes beyond commercial aviation.
As of Monday’s open, HONA traded at $236.78, with TD Cowen’s $250 target implying roughly 5.5% upside from that level.
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