In the last decade, Honeywell International (NYSE: HON) stock has returned $44 billion to its shareholders through dividends and buybacks. Despite facing headwinds in 2025, the industrial conglomerate has shown resilience with the stock delivering -6.20% year-to-date returns, reflecting broader industrial sector challenges while maintaining its position as a defensive dividend play amid market uncertainty.
Honeywell International Inc. (HON) concluded the recent trading session at $202.5, signifying a -2.93% move from its prior day's close.
The production of electronics for aviation is a bright spot in the aerospace supply chain, whereas manufacturing of some parts still remains challenging, a senior executive at supplier Honeywell told Reuters.
HON's Building Automation segment powers ahead with strong global demand and five straight quarters of order growth.
HON posts strong aerospace gains and boosts growth with acquisitions, but industrial softness and rising costs weigh on results.
Honeywell International (HON) has been upgraded to a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy), reflecting growing optimism about the company's earnings prospects. This might drive the stock higher in the near term.
HON lifts its quarterly dividend 5% to $1.19 per share, marking the 16th straight annual increase since 2010.
HON unveils Ionic Modular All-in-One, a compact, flexible energy storage platform with advanced control and cybersecurity.
Nvidia's VC arm was among the participants in a recently announced capital raise for Quantinuum, which is Honeywell's quantum-computing business.
HON expands its smart energy portfolio with SparkMeter's utility platforms, boosting grid intelligence and data-driven solutions.
HON and MMM both face headwinds, but strong aerospace growth and rising estimates make the former the stronger 2025 bet.
HON sees robust demand in Building Automation, with strong sales growth in North America, the Middle East and key verticals.