Here's What Honeywell's Big News Means for Investors

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The announcement of a future spin-off of Honeywell's (NASDAQ: HON) advanced materials business caused a spike in the share price and some rare excitement for a stock that hasn't gone anywhere over the last three years.

But is it a temporary break in the slumber or the start of a significant move upward in the price? Here's what you need to know about Honeywell's latest news.

Honeywell cheers the market

The industrial company's stock price has been flat over the last three years compared to a 32% increase in the S&P 500. As such, investors are looking for a potential upside catalyst for the share price. The obvious candidate is a breakup to release value.

After all, former industrial conglomerates like United Technologies (now RTX, Otis, and Carrier Global), General Electric (GE Aerospace, GE Healthcare, GE Vernova, and others), and Danaher (Danaher, Fortive, Veralto, Envista, and Vontier) have done the same.

The general idea is that breaking up conglomerates will enable management to focus on core businesses and expertise while realigning the capital structure of the new companies. The result will be improved earnings, better access to capital, and a revamping of valuation. So in theory, Honeywell could break up, and the sum of the new companies will be greater than its current valuation.

It's an idea that finds favor with investors. A quick look at Honeywell's ratio of enterprise value to earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation, and amortization (EV-to-EBITDA) compared to peers in aerospace (RTX and Safran), industrial automation (Rockwell, Emerson Electric, and Schneider), and building automation (Johnson Controls and Schneider) shows a clear discount.

HON EV to EBITDA Chart
HON EV to EBITDA Chart

That's why the market got excited by the news that Honeywell would spin off its advanced materials business by the end of 2025 or early 2026.

Honeywell's restructuring

That said, the move looks more like the portfolio restructuring that CEO Vimal Kapur continues to undertake rather than the start of an inevitable breakup. There's little doubt that management has considered splitting up the company and restructuring it around what it identifies as three megatrends: the future of aviation, automation, and the energy transition. This frames the company in a way conducive to potentially breaking it up.

Furthermore, Kapur has been more aggressive in mergers and acquisitions than his predecessor, Darius Adamczyk, and has made over $10 billion in acquisitions since 2023 across all three trends discussed above.

Mergers and acquisitions graphic.
Image source: Getty Images.

At the same time, according to Bloomberg, Honeywell is believed to be close to selling its personal protective equipment (PPE) business for $1.5 billion and could conduct an initial public offering for its quantum computing business Quantinuum for about $10 billion.