Honeywell Technologies raised its 2026 profit guidance Wednesday, and on paper the jump looks dramatic: full-year adjusted earnings per share moving to a range of $7.90 to $8.30, roughly double the previous $3.95 to $4.15 forecast. Second-half guidance shows the same pattern, up to $4.40-$4.70 from $2.20-$2.35. Sales and segment margin targets, notably, didn’t move at all. That gap between an EPS figure that doubled and a revenue figure that didn’t budge is what NewsTrackerToday checks against the mechanical explanation sitting right underneath the headline.
The explanation is a one-for-two reverse stock split, completed the same week, which cut Honeywell Technologies’ outstanding shares from 634 million to 317 million. Cut the share count in half and the same total dollar profit divided across those shares produces a per-share figure that’s roughly double what it was before, without the underlying business earning a single additional dollar. The split followed the completed spinoff of Honeywell Aerospace late last month, part of the company’s broader three-way breakup into Honeywell Technologies, Solstice Advanced Materials, and Honeywell Aerospace.
Ethan Cole reads the arithmetic tersely: “Shares roughly halved. EPS guidance roughly doubled. Sales guidance unchanged. Margin guidance unchanged. That’s not improved performance, that’s the same pie cut into fewer, bigger slices. Investors who see ‘guidance raised’ in a headline and assume the company is suddenly earning more money are reading the number wrong. The company that actually earns the money didn’t change today. Only the denominator did.” That framing, flat pie cut into smaller slices, is what NewsTrackerToday comes down to whenever a guidance headline and a restructuring event land in the same week.
That breakup itself has a more interesting backstory than the reverse split does. The three-way split was announced last year under direct pressure from activist investor Elliott Investment Management, which had argued Honeywell’s combined industrial, aerospace, and advanced materials businesses were worth more apart than bundled together under one ticker. The Aerospace spinoff completed in late June; the reverse split and updated guidance this week are essentially the accounting cleanup that follows a spinoff of that size.
Isabella Moretti reads the corporate-strategy angle: “Elliott’s thesis was straightforward: conglomerate structures obscure how well or badly each individual business is actually performing, and separating them forces the market to price each piece on its own merits. Whether that thesis proves out depends entirely on what Honeywell Technologies, the automation-focused business that’s left standing here, actually delivers on its own once the reverse-split noise clears out of the numbers.” That distinction between restructuring math and operating performance is what News Tracker Today reads against every guidance update this specific stock produces for the next several quarters.
Honeywell Technologies now guides to roughly $19.9 billion to $20.2 billion in full-year sales, the automation-only business that remains after Aerospace’s departure, a scope that’s naturally smaller than the combined company’s prior guidance before the split apart. The company is scheduled to report full second-quarter results and provide further detail on July 23.
None of this means the stock move is meaningless, markets can and do react to how a guidance headline reads even when the underlying math is mechanical. But whether Honeywell Technologies’ actual automation business grows into the post-split structure Elliott pushed for, rather than simply looking bigger on a per-share basis because the share count shrank, is what NewsTrackerToday settles as the real test the July 23 earnings call will need to address directly.