This Dow Jones Dividend Stock Is Packed With Potential, but Is It a Buy Now?

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Honeywell International (NASDAQ: HON) fell a little over 5% on Oct. 24 despite reporting better-than-expected third-quarter earnings. The industrial conglomerate updated its full-year targets and gave investors insight into its strategic plans to get the company back on track toward more meaningful growth.

In September, the Dow Jones Industrial Average component raised its dividend for the 14th consecutive year to $4.52 per share -- representing a forward yield of 2.2%. Here's what you need to know from Honeywell's latest report and if the dividend stock is worth buying now.

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A person wearing personal protective equipment working on an airplane.
Image source: Getty Images.

From Wall Street darling to laggard

Honeywell's stock price soared 374% during the 2010s -- crushing the 190% gain in the S&P 500. But the stock price has languished for the last four years, heavily underperforming the market.

Honeywell's performance, especially in its aerospace segment, nosedived during the COVID-19 pandemic -- which was understandable given the commercial airline industry ground to a halt. Investors were willing to give Honeywell a pass so long as it returned to growth during the post-pandemic recovery. But Honeywell's results have continued to disappoint.

The conglomerate serves various business-to-business customers in manufacturing, energy, logistics and warehouses, healthcare, and more. When the business is right, Honeywell is a highly diversified cash cow that can offset the cyclical nature of some of these end markets by offering a broad range of products and services.

But Honeywell has failed to return to its pre-pandemic form, blaming weak demand, supply chain challenges, inflation, and macroeconomic factors. As you can see in the chart, Honeywell's stock price is up just 17.5% in the last five years, which is fair considering revenue and earnings per share (EPS) have gone practically nowhere. EPS is only up due to buybacks, as net income has fallen during this period.

HON Chart
HON Chart

Honeywell's turnaround strategy

There are many reasons for Honeywell's lackluster performance. But the simplest is that it became big, bulky, and bogged down by a lack of flexibility and innovation. Honeywell recognized that change was in order, and it made an aggressive plan to make a flurry of acquisitions and divest and simplify its business to align with its three highest-conviction megatrends: automation, the future of aviation, and the energy transition.

So far in 2024, Honeywell has spent over $9 billion on mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and a total of around $14 billion on capital expenditures, dividends, and share repurchases, putting it on track to spend at least $25 billion on these efforts through 2025.