Honeywell International (NASDAQ:HON) is on track to complete its planned separation on June 29, the first day of the third quarter, Chief Financial Officer and Senior Vice President Mike Stepniak said at an investor conference.
Stepniak said the company is in the “final stages” of separating and described the process as having “all green lights.” He added that Honeywell is operationally ready, though some transitional services agreements and post-spin activities will remain.
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“I don’t foresee any issues as far as the 29th,” Stepniak said.
Honeywell also reconfirmed its full-year forecast and guidance, with Stepniak citing “positivity in the markets generally.” Aerospace will hold an analyst day in Phoenix on June 3, while the remaining company, or RemainCo, will hold an analyst day in New York City on June 11.
Middle East Headwind Eases
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Stepniak said conditions in the Middle East are proving more resilient than Honeywell previously expected. The company had cited $100 million to $150 million of second-quarter pressure from the region, but Stepniak said the outlook is now “looking much better.”
Customers in the region remain active, he said, with Honeywell teams and general managers visiting customers and repair work underway. Stepniak said customers are not only seeking repairs but also discussing future expansion.
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“Underlying demand is still there,” he said, adding that Honeywell sees “really good demand” from the region over the medium term.
Automation Businesses Show Mixed but Improving Trends
Stepniak said Building Automation continues to perform strongly, with broad-based strength across the business. He noted that the segment has delivered high-single-digit growth for the past six quarters and said it is on pace for another strong quarter.
He attributed the outgrowth to several strategic changes, including a region-for-region approach, reinvestment in research and development, new product introductions and the growth of Honeywell Forge. Stepniak said the company is gaining traction in verticals such as life sciences, hospitality, hospitals and data centers, though data centers remain a relatively small business for Honeywell.
On Industrial Automation, Stepniak described the business as a “self-help” story and said it is beginning to show improvement under Peter Lau’s leadership. He said Honeywell is seeing “green shoots” in the underlying market and believes the business has stopped losing share and is starting to gain share.
