Discloses More Than $5
Billion Investment
Calls for Honeywell to Separate Into Two
Industry-Leading Independent Companies
Sees 51-75% Share-Price Upside Over Next Two
Years
Full Letter Available at
ElliottLetters.com
WEST
PALM BEACH, Fla., Nov. 12,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Elliott Investment Management
L.P. ("Elliott"), which manages funds that together have made an
investment of more than $5 billion in
Honeywell International Inc. (NYSE: HON) (the "Company" or
"Honeywell"), today sent a letter to its Board of Directors calling
for a simplification of Honeywell's
conglomerate structure.
Honeywell is an iconic pillar of the American industrial complex
and remains a world-class company with market-leading assets,
Elliott wrote. But uneven execution, inconsistent financial results
and an underperforming share price have diminished the Company's
strong record of value creation over the last five years. The
conglomerate structure that once suited Honeywell no longer does,
and the time has come to embrace simplification.
In order to realize its full potential, Elliott recommended that
Honeywell pursue a separation of Aerospace and
Automation. Both entities would be sector leaders and be
better positioned to thrive operationally, serve customers and
employees, and create long-term value for shareholders.
As independent entities, Honeywell Aerospace and Honeywell
Automation would benefit from simplified strategies, focused
management, improved capital allocation, better operational
performance, enhanced oversight, and numerous other benefits now
enjoyed by dozens of large businesses that have moved on from the
conglomerate structure, including former conglomerates General
Electric, United Technologies, and many more.
According to the letter, Elliott believes there is a tremendous
opportunity for value creation at Honeywell. This includes an
enhanced strategic focus that will allow each company to drive
improved operating performance and, a set of simplified investment
narratives that will deliver superior valuations. Elliott
believes a separation of Aerospace and Automation would result in
share-price gains of 51% – 75% over the next two years.
Elliott said it hopes its letter to Honeywell is received in the
same spirit in which it was sent: A desire to work together to help
Honeywell achieve its full potential. Elliott requested an
opportunity to meet with the Company to advance the shared
commitment to Honeywell's success.
The letter can be downloaded at ElliottLetters.com.
The full text of the letter follows:
November 12, 2024
Honeywell International Inc.
855 S. Mint Street
Charlotte, North Carolina,
28202
Dear Members of the Board:
We are writing to you on behalf of funds managed by Elliott
Investment L.P. (together with such funds, "Elliott" or "We").
Elliott has made an investment of more than $5 billion in Honeywell International Inc.
("Honeywell" or the "Company"), making us the Company's largest
active investor. Our position in Honeywell is one of Elliott's
largest investments to date, reflecting our strong conviction in
the unique value creation opportunity present at the Company
today.
For over a century, Honeywell has been an iconic pillar of the
American industrial complex, pioneering technologies that have had
broad and profound impact. For decades, Honeywell's operating
performance delivered outstanding financial results, benefiting
investors and employees.
Honeywell remains a world-class company with market-leading
assets. However, over the last five years, uneven execution,
inconsistent financial results and an underperforming share price
have diminished its strong record of value creation.
We believe these challenges have a clear cause and a
straightforward solution: The conglomerate structure that once
suited Honeywell no longer does, and the time has come to embrace
simplification.
Our letter today outlines why we believe Honeywell should
separate into two standalone companies – Honeywell Aerospace and
Honeywell Automation – to create two sector leaders better
positioned to thrive operationally, serve customers and employees,
and create long-term value for shareholders.
As independent entities, Honeywell Aerospace and Honeywell
Automation would benefit from simplified strategies, focused
management, improved capital allocation, better operational
performance, enhanced oversight, and numerous other benefits now
enjoyed by dozens of large businesses that have moved on from the
conglomerate structure.
In addition, we believe these new companies will each benefit
from a clear and attractive investment narrative that will help
remedy Honeywell's depressed valuation. As the work we present in
this letter shows, we believe the market will generously reward the
time and effort required to separate these businesses. In fact,
we believe a separation could result in share price upside of
51-75% over the next two years – a remarkable improvement for
any business, let alone a $150
billion industrial bellwether.
Our letter today is organized as follows:
- Our Investment in Honeywell
- Honeywell Today
- The Case for Simplification
- A Transformational Opportunity
- The Path Forward
Honeywell is a great company, and its performance as an
investment should match. We are sharing these views with you, and
the broader market, to draw attention to this unique and compelling
value creation opportunity in the hopes of building a consensus for
the best path forward.
I. Our Investment in Honeywell
Founded in 1977, Elliott is one of the oldest private investment
firms under continuous leadership and manages approximately
$69.7 billion in assets.1
Our approach to investing begins with an extensive due diligence
process. In the case of Honeywell, this included more than 200
conversations with former Honeywell employees and industry experts
to refine our understanding of the challenges facing its various
businesses. We engaged a leading management consulting firm to
conduct commercial diligence, as well as an investment bank to help
us assess all of the potential considerations of a business
separation. We gathered insights from customers and fellow
shareholders through extensive survey work, including commercial
surveys to better understand customer ordering patterns, and
investor surveys that revealed Honeywell investors' appetite for
change. We have also engaged legal counsel to advise us on legal
and structuring matters, as well as accounting firms to help
evaluate potential financial and tax considerations.
Additionally, we have benefited from our significant experience
in each of the specific sub-sectors most relevant to Honeywell,
including as board members and operators. To cite a few specific
recent examples: Within aerospace, an Elliott partner has served on
the board of Howmet Aerospace for the past seven years; Elliott is
also highly active in the energy sector, including as investors and
owners of multiple upstream and downstream oil and gas companies;
and earlier this year, in the building automation space, we worked
constructively with Johnson Controls on its well-received oversight
and portfolio changes. These experiences, among many others,
provide us with the necessary breadth and depth to evaluate
Honeywell and all of its constituent businesses.
Through our experience and diligence, we believe we have
developed a strong understanding of Honeywell's complexities,
challenges and opportunities. This effort has deepened our
admiration for Honeywell, reinforced our appreciation of its global
importance and underscored the urgency of restoring its
success.
II. Honeywell Today
Honeywell is an iconic American company with a history spanning
more than 100 years. While it has experienced significant evolution
over time, Honeywell in its current form traces its roots back to
the 1999 merger of Honeywell and AlliedSignal. That combination
created a complex, conflicted organization, which fell into further
disarray after its proposed acquisition by GE in 2000 was
ultimately blocked. From that challenged state, former CEO
David Cote executed one of the great
turnaround success stories in corporate history.
Years of Mr. Cote's portfolio-shaping and visionary leadership
helped Honeywell secure "great positions in good industries," as he
often put it. Today, Honeywell enjoys a broad portfolio of
market-leading assets that span aerospace & defense, industrial
automation, building automation and energy & sustainability
solutions. Nearly all of these end markets are experiencing secular
growth, with Honeywell holding leading market shares in each. The
result is a collection of high-quality assets that each
individually represent highly attractive businesses.
See Exhibit 1: Current Honeywell
Portfolio.
Among Honeywell's collection of best-in-class businesses,
Honeywell Aerospace stands out as its crown jewel. Against an
industry backdrop of significant secular growth, Honeywell
Aerospace is a top-five global commercial aerospace supplier with a
broad offering of limited-life proprietary products across all
major platforms, benefiting from a long tail of captive aftermarket
sales. In the industry, Honeywell is known as a technology leader
that has succeeded in balancing industry-leading R&D spending
with near best-in-class operating margins.
Beyond Aerospace, Honeywell contains similarly impressive assets
aligned with core global growth trends in automation and energy
transition. This portfolio has been assembled over decades,
resulting in a leading global installed base of Honeywell products
across process automation, energy technology, and commercial
buildings. In each of these markets, Honeywell owns proprietary
intellectual property that drives efficiencies for customers while
generating robust profitability and secular growth for
Honeywell.
Buoyed by this strong collection of assets, Honeywell propelled
itself forward for years with market-leading operational rigor and
continuous improvement, driving consistent margin expansion and
compiling an enviable track record of sustained
execution. Prior to the last five years, Honeywell's
remarkable consistency drove the highest Earnings per Share (EPS)
growth rate among its diversified industrial peers, as well as
best-in-class shareholder returns.
See Exhibit 2: EPS Growth and Total
Shareholder Return vs. Peers.
As the chart above shows, Honeywell has spent the better part of
this century performing not only as a top-tier company, but also as
a top-tier investment. And to be clear, Honeywell remains a
terrific company. But as an investment, the picture has changed
meaningfully.
From Leader to Laggard
Once an operational powerhouse whose stellar financial results
generated market-leading returns, Honeywell's stock has languished
over the past five years. Since 2019, Honeywell's EPS growth has
been at the low end of its peer set and, unsurprisingly, its
shareholder returns have been equally disappointing. As discussed
later in this letter, this underperformance is a direct result of a
suboptimal corporate structure that has led to inconsistent
operational execution, a diversified portfolio beset with numerous
challenges and the lack of a cohesive investor narrative.
See Exhibit 3: Last 5 Years – EPS Growth and
Total Shareholder Return vs. Peers.
Honeywell has now vastly underperformed all businesses except
for 3M, which has struggled with
substantial environmental liabilities, and Fortive, which recently
announced a break-up as a means of improving its business focus and
value.
Over the past five years in particular, Honeywell's share price
has dramatically underperformed both its peers and the broader
market. More recently, this underperformance has been particularly
acute. In fact, the Company's share price has declined after all
six of its most recent quarterly earnings, with three of these
events ranking among Honeywell's four largest negative earnings
reactions in the last 15 years.
"For a company that used to guide conservative
and be able to manage whatever came their way to drive upside…
missing a somewhat aggressive guidance and reducing margins in the
meantime, shows how this is not the same Honeywell." (JP
Morgan, July
2024)2
The unfortunate result is that Honeywell's cumulative total
shareholder return has underperformed benchmarks across virtually
all time periods over the past ten years. This
underperformance affects not only investors, but also current and
former Honeywell employees, who hold a significant portion of their
compensation and pensions in the Company's stock.
See Exhibit 4: Relative Total Shareholder
Return.
Most disappointing is that this significant underperformance has
occurred despite a historically strong end-market for aerospace
& defense, which accounts for nearly half of Honeywell's
profit. While aerospace-industry valuations have expanded
significantly in recent years, Honeywell's multiple has remained
flat, and the Company currently trades at more than a 25% discount
to its aerospace peers. In fact, Honeywell's multiple has even
underperformed its industrial peers that lack
significant aerospace exposure. Worse yet, this gap continues to
widen.
See Exhibit 5: Historical Valuations –
NTM EV /EBITDA - CapEx and Honeywell Premium / (Discount) vs.
Peers.
As the charts above show, Honeywell today trades at a material
discount to peers and a historically cheap relative valuation. In
fact, Honeywell now trades below every single one of its
diversified industrial and aerospace supplier
peers.3
See Exhibit 6: EV / 2025E EBITDA –
CapEx.
These charts tell the story of why we are here. Under
David Cote's leadership, Honeywell
transformed from a poorly run business into a high-performing
operation whose industry-leading earnings growth delivered
best-in-class shareholder returns. Today, the situation is quite
different. What was once an operational turnaround story with
meaningful room for improvement is now a mature business with an
uncertain path to value creation in its current form. Flawless
execution, accelerating growth and a compelling long-term narrative
are no longer untapped sources of outperformance – they are table
stakes. And achieving them is made significantly more difficult by
Honeywell's status as one of the last remaining industrial
conglomerates.
Of course, not every conglomerate is doomed to struggle with
performance. There are examples of diversified, multi-line
businesses that have succeeded, even over long periods of time. But
each case needs to be evaluated on the merits, and success in the
past does not ensure optimal performance in the future – especially
when the menu of options for investors has evolved in ways that
have made conglomerates less attractive as investments.
In Honeywell's case, the Company has struggled even with the
table-stakes part of the equation in recent years, and the
significant deterioration in its share price performance and
valuation reflects a loss of faith among Honeywell's investors that
it can overcome the limitations of its conglomerate
structure. Fortunately, there is a straightforward solution at
hand – a single step that can vastly improve this great company's
likelihood of success and create substantially more value than any
of the more incremental actions contemplated to date.
III. The Case for Simplification
Modern-day Honeywell is among the most sprawling, diversified
multi-industry businesses around. Externally, Honeywell has 12
different public reporting lines, each of which could operate as a
sizeable standalone public company. Internally, Honeywell maintains
more than 700 different sites with ~100,000 employees spread across
~80 countries. Honeywell is a truly global company touching many
parts of the economy. The breadth of the portfolio, coupled with
the depth of expertise required to remain a leader in each of these
industries, results in a company that is unwieldy for all parties –
from management to investors.
"Over time the company has become unwieldy,
arguably uninvestable." (Melius, October
2024)
Honeywell's struggle with complexity is neither unique nor
surprising; it is endemic to the conglomerate operating
model. The issues that Honeywell is dealing with today
have already been studied and resolved by many of the country's
most important companies, including GE, United Technologies, Alcoa,
Danaher, Tyco, Ingersoll Rand,
Johnson Controls, ITT, Pentair, DuPont and countless others that
have found success through simplification. There is abundant
evidence that simplification results in better business
performance, and the industrials landscape is rife with recent
successful examples of former conglomerates that improved
performance, enhanced valuation and generated immense shareholder
returns through separation.
"The trend toward a refined and simplified
portfolio is a journey that has been underway for nearly two
decades … GE's most recent breakup announcement could perhaps
be signal of a near peak in the unwinding of the conglomerate
structure…The spin-offs of OTIS and CARR from UTX are the most
recent example of companies freed from corporate shackles that
fared better independently and repudiated the conglomerate
model." (Mizuho, September
2024)
Against this backdrop of simplification initiatives undertaken
by its closest competitors, Honeywell's complexity stands
apart. Fortunately, Honeywell itself has acknowledged that
excess complexity can be an impediment to business performance and
shareholder value creation. To CEO Vimal
Kapur's credit, he has initiated several incremental
portfolio changes and has spoken in depth about working towards a
"simpler, clearer strategic focus and clearly defined Honeywell
value proposition for our customers, investors and
employees."
Honeywell has recently taken some initial actions to simplify –
spinning off Advanced Materials, for example. These are steps in
the right direction, but they are not enough. They do not address
the root of Honeywell's complexity issues – its status as a
diversified conglomerate.
"[Advanced Materials] Spin makes sense, but is
it enough?...While we welcome this news, we think much more may
be needed to move the needle." (UBS, October 2024)
A Better Path: A Simplified Honeywell
Now is the time for Honeywell to chart a path to success similar
to the one traversed by many of its peers – with its leadership
team operating from a position of strength towards a simplified
structure that enables greater focus and operational excellence. By
separating into Honeywell Aerospace and Honeywell Automation – with
the latter capturing what is today Industrial Automation, Building
Automation and Energy & Sustainability Solutions ("ESS") – into
two stand-alone, industry-leading companies, Honeywell would be
best positioned to reverse its recent stagnation, improve
operational performance, and deliver long-term value for
shareholders.
The benefits of a separation can be broken down into two primary
areas: A) an enhanced strategic focus that will allow each company
to drive improved operating performance, and B) a set of simplified
investment narratives that will deliver superior valuations.
Together, we believe these factors will drive both meaningful
business improvements and substantial value creation, as
demonstrated by many of the peers that have undertaken structural
simplification. We will take each of the core benefits in turn,
contrasting this better path with the status quo.
A. Enhanced Strategic Focus Will
Drive Improved Operating Performance
Honeywell today suffers from operational issues that are common
to conglomerates: specifically, its smaller businesses suffer from
a lack of management attention, its larger businesses suffer from
competition for investment dollars with other parts of the
portfolio, and the whole conglomerate suffers from the difficulty
of managing such a large and sprawling organization.
Honeywell's Streamlined Businesses Will Perform Better
Post-Simplification
As highlighted above, the extreme complexity inherent in
managing 12 large business lines leaves Honeywell's leadership
constantly contending with multiple operational challenges at once.
In the most recent quarter alone, Honeywell suffered from a series
of challenges as wide-ranging as unexpected delays in Process
Solutions and UOP, softer short-cycle sales in Industrial
Automation, discrete supply chain disruptions in Aerospace,
catalyst delivery push-outs, uncertainty caused by geopolitical
events, and a facility fire. The only certainty in a portfolio as
complex as Honeywell's is that management will have to contend with
many unpredictable problems at once, affecting the time and
attention it can devote to the rest of the portfolio.
"Which leaves the elephant in the room – what
does HON need to spin/sell in order to get this portfolio into
something that is manageable? Not just manageable for HON – and
avoiding the 'whack a mole' trend we have experienced here – but
manageable for investors?" (Melius, July
2024)
In recent years, Honeywell's operational issues have been most
pronounced in the Industrial Automation segment (previously known
as "SPS"). Specific areas of underperformance in Honeywell's SPS
segment include Warehouse & Workflow Solutions ("Warehouse"),
Productivity Solutions & Services ("Productivity"), and PPE,
all of which have declined at a double-digit rate since 2021.
See Exhibit 7: Revenue and Organic Growth by
Business Unit.
We believe that Honeywell's conglomerate model has contributed
to this underperformance. Honeywell's products themselves are
competitive – our survey work consistently highlighted that more
than 90% of surveyed distributors across SPS's end markets rated
Honeywell's products as in-line with or better than peers'.
However, missteps in areas such as pricing tactics and sales
execution have weighed on performance. This raises the question of
whether a smaller organization, led by hyper-focused executives,
could have navigated these issues more effectively.
The fact that these issues cropped up in the Company's smallest
businesses is completely understandable given Honeywell's current
structure. How can Honeywell's corporate leadership dedicate the
same amount of mindshare to its smallest businesses – which each
amount to ~3% of revenue – as the CEOs of pure-play rivals who
devote 100% of their focus to maximizing the value of their
companies? Why would Honeywell's management prioritize the "long
tail" of its smaller businesses when its largest businesses rightly
dominate its attention?
In fact, former Honeywell CEO Darius
Adamczyk described this dynamic quite well in 2017: "I
think today, we're in roughly, call it, 7 to 9 end-markets
depending upon how you think about it. And some of them are very
small that, frankly, don't move the needle that much… And that's a
factor, right, because I want my leadership focused on things that
matter. And even smaller businesses that you'd say, 'Well, okay,
but that doesn't move the needle either way.' It's true, but I want
the focus from my management teams on things that matter and
smaller things sometimes can be a distraction."
Warehouse, Productivity and PPE are small businesses within
Honeywell's portfolio, amounting to less than 10% of total revenue
combined. But the magnitude of the underperformance in these
smaller units has been pronounced enough to constrain Honeywell's
overall growth, and it has weighed heavily on the narrative of what
has otherwise been a strong growth story.
See Exhibit 8: Honeywell Growth Excluding SPS
is Above Peers – 1Q'22 to 3Q'24.
"HON's organic growth has only outperformed
MI/EE peers in two of the last eleven years – and we believe
that the most obvious reason for this is the company's conglomerate
structure, which has become rare in our coverage universe."
(Deutsche Bank, April 2024)
Fortunately, many of the drivers of this underperformance are
addressable, and we believe that as a more singularly focused
company – separate from Aerospace – Honeywell Automation will be
best positioned to focus on improving its areas of weakness and
driving better execution. While each situation is unique, the
recurring narrative that has played out following the
simplification of Honeywell's peers has been one of smaller, more
agile organizations achieving vast operational improvements over
the performance they delivered within a conglomerate structure.
"You may ask, why does being a pure-play
matter? We've highlighted five reasons why being a pure-play
matters and I'll focus on two. First, we will continue
relentless reinvestments to fuel market-leading innovation. Our
purpose-driven strategy is 100% focused on driving sustainability …
Second, we've developed, refined and strived to optimize our
business operating system over the past 10 years since we
acquired the Trane HVAC business in 2008… [the
transformation of the company] enables a step function improvement
in our ability to continue to deliver innovation and growth and
margin improvement simultaneously over the long term for
shareholders." (Michael
Lamach, CEO of Trane, December
2020)
We can see these operating improvements at work at other
companies that have simplified into more streamlined entities. We
observed a pattern of improved operating performance across almost
every comparable example we evaluated, with a few notable
precedents below:
See Exhibit 9: Precedent Separations.
"Listen, I'm really pleased with our
performance since spin. We're a more agile company. We're a focused
company. We're executing on our strategy, and I think we're seeing
a pace that just wasn't inherent in a conglomerate."
(Judy Marks, CEO of Otis,
September 2022)
Simplification Will Reduce Honeywell's
Competing Investment Priorities
Competition for fixed investment dollars across a conglomerate's
portfolio creates challenges for both organic investments and
M&A. Such diversified organizations often suffer from
suboptimal R&D allocation, as competing priorities and internal
frameworks can hinder the efficient allocation of investment
dollars. Over time, this dynamic can erode the competitive position
of certain businesses – especially those competing with
pure-plays.
In Honeywell's case, its underlying business units not only
compete with one another for investment allocation, but also have
to compete against broader corporate initiatives. For example,
consider Quantinuum. While we make no judgment on Quantinuum
itself, it is reasonable to question whether Honeywell's investing
in quantum computing is a distraction – in either investment
dollars or management mindshare – from its core businesses.
A pure-play Honeywell Aerospace, for instance, would be unlikely
to pursue such an ambitious venture outside its core focus. By
contrast, Honeywell's pure-play competitors enjoy a distinct
advantage, as they can direct all investment into their core
businesses without having to contend with this kind of internal
competition. A separation would sharpen Honeywell's focus, enabling
a more efficient allocation of resources toward its core business
priorities.
"As I've gotten into the details, what
I've learned is that ex-Solventum R&D investment for core
3M, which is running about
$1 billion per year, or about 4.5% of
revenue, has been flat nominally over the past five years and
down on a real basis, as the focus was on investing in and
strengthening the Health Care business." (William Brown, CEO of 3M, July
2024)
In addition to competing internal priorities, there is also a
natural tension between allocating inorganic investment to
Honeywell Aerospace, where Honeywell already has a broad portfolio,
versus investing in smaller segments to increase diversification
and promote portfolio balance. We believe this helps explain the
historical lack of M&A at Honeywell Aerospace, despite
generating Honeywell's greatest profits and garnering its highest
valuation. Over the past two decades, Aerospace generated 43% of
the Company's cumulative profit but received only 10% of the
Company's M&A dollars. At the same time, several of its
competitors, including Transdigm, Heico, Parker-Hannifin, Safran,
and others – have created significant value through M&A. We
question if the lack of M&A at Honeywell Aerospace is
illustrative of missed opportunities stemming from Honeywell's
conglomerate structure.
"I think the biggest differentiating factor is
that we have full access to our own cash flow and working capital.
And the significance of that is that these businesses have tended
to be underinvested in from a capital deployment relative to
M&A in the last 5 to 8 years … The opportunity for us to
spend that on value-accretive M&A is going to be incredibly
impactful." (Jennifer Honeycutt,
CEO of Veralto following its separation from Danaher, November 2023)
All of Honeywell's Businesses Will Benefit from More Focused
Oversight
As separate public entities, Honeywell Aerospace and Honeywell
Automation would benefit from dedicated boards with more tailored
experience as well as enhanced management focus and alignment.
For example, only one of Honeywell's directors possesses
Aerospace experience (specific to airlines), despite the importance
of the Aerospace business to Honeywell. This lack of
industry-specific expertise is common among conglomerates, whose
boards typically include fewer directors with specialized knowledge
for each division. However, when conglomerates restructure, the
resulting pure-play companies often strengthen their boards by
adding directors with relevant expertise, leading to overall
enhancements in strategic oversight.
See Exhibit 10: Separation Enables Focused and
Dedicated Oversight.
"Speaking of the team, speaking of alignment,
one of the other benefits that we were very keen to realize in
the spins is the creation of 3 focused Boards chock-full of domain
expertise, fit for purpose in Healthcare, Aerospace and in
Energy." (Larry Culp, CEO of GE,
March 2024)
In the area of management focus and retention, consider that
Honeywell's business leaders currently have only 40% of their
short-term incentive compensation and less than 20% of their
long-term incentive compensation directly tied to segment
performance. Meanwhile, their equity awards are granted in
Honeywell stock, which they have limited ability to influence given
the breadth of the Company. By contrast, at pure-play businesses,
each management team's compensation is more directly tied to the
performance of its specific business, leading to greater alignment
and ability to recruit and retain top talent.
"If you think about a spin, what does it do
right away? It attracts great talent … If I take Wayde McMillan, my CFO, who was a public company
CFO before this job, if you would have called him and said, 'Hey,
why don't you come and run the Solventum sub-business of
3M and you can be a Vice President of
Finance, he would just hang up the phone." (Bryan Hanson, CEO of Solventum, March 2024)
B. A Simplified Investment
Narrative Will Drive Superior Valuations
In an earlier era, conglomerates served a less sophisticated
investor base by providing investment diversification. The idea was
simple: With just one ticker, an investor could gain exposure to
numerous end markets at once, achieving stability without complex
portfolio construction.
Today, however, the investment landscape looks far different.
Investors are now far more sophisticated, and with the rise of ETFs
and indices, they can easily diversify on their own – targeting
specific end markets where they want outsized exposure or
constructing their own diversified portfolios. No longer do
investors need, or even want, management teams to handle that
allocation for them.
This shift in investor preferences is most evident in how
capital is allocated between conglomerates and pure-play businesses
– in effect, how investors "vote with their feet." Active fund
managers' weighting towards industrial conglomerates is now at a
multi-decade low, and by far the lowest of all S&P500
Industrial sectors. At the same time, observing the relative fund
weightings of Honeywell and GE since 2000 is instructive. While GE
was under-owned by investors for decades, its recent simplification
has led to a dramatic re-weighting. On the other hand,
institutional ownership of Honeywell has been in a long-term trend
downwards.
See Exhibit 11: Active Fund Ownership Relative
Weighting.
"Very simply, HON is a complicated business
and conglomerate models are getting clear discounts vs.
companies with greater end market focus." (UBS, October 2024)
As investor preference has shifted in favor of pure-play
businesses, the theory that a conglomerate provides insulation from
the vagaries of the business cycle has given way to the reality
that underperformance in one part of a conglomerate today simply
drags down the narrative of the whole. In many ways, the very
diversification that once made conglomerates attractive has
diminished their appeal.
In addition to weighing down consolidated financial results, the
struggles of underperforming businesses tend to overshadow other
parts of the portfolio. Today, for instance, the business line with
the most pronounced underperformance is Warehouse, the most
challenged business within SPS. Despite representing just 3% of
sales, Warehouse is raised by analysts on earnings calls more
frequently than Process Solutions and UOP combined, despite these
businesses being more than eight times its size. As Barclays
noted in October 2023, "SPS
discourse dominates the stock."
This dysfunctional dynamic creates a "least common denominator"
effect, where investors' perceptions of Honeywell are only as good
as the Company's worst-performing segment. In a company with 12
disparate reporting lines, there will likely always be an
underperforming business that serves as a valuation overhang.
"HON shares have
chronically underperformed as EPS growth has lagged and better
opportunities emerged in pure play names. HON continues to execute
well and has strong margins and competitive positions, but its
diversification is working against it as investors focus more on
whatever is wrong or lagging instead of what is good and
leading." (Vertical Research Partners, July 2024)
With this in mind, it is no surprise that Honeywell today is
valued at a material discount to its peers. In fact, as shown
previously, it has the lowest valuation of any company in its peer
set, despite its outsized exposure to the high-value aerospace
sector.
Fortunately, many conglomerates in similar situations have been
able to remedy their valuation discounts substantially through
simplification. GE, United Technologies and Ingersoll Rand have all recently demonstrated
the magnitude of business outperformance and value creation that
can follow separation. All three separated into two to three more
focused assets that subsequently achieved operational
outperformance due to greater end-market alignment and agility,
which in turn was rewarded with a dramatic value re-rating driven
by a simplified narrative and greater investor appeal. When
comparing each conglomerate's valuation at the announcement of
separation to the valuation of its component averages today, the
uplift becomes starkly apparent.
See Exhibit 12: Conglomerate Valuations
Pre-Announcement vs. Constituent Avg. Today (NTM EV/EBITDA –
CapEx).
Putting it Together
The combination of these two dynamics – improved operating
performance and enhanced valuation – has created a substantial
amount of value for investors. Since simplifying their previously
sprawling structures, all three of the former conglomerates
mentioned in the section above have delivered outstanding
shareholder returns.
See Exhibit 13: TSR of Peers that Have Pursued
Separations (Absolute and Relative to Honeywell) – Since
2019.
"The relentless sector trend of
"Urge to Demerge" has transformed most Multi-Industry portfolios
over the past five years. Prior to the COVID downturn, the
Multi-Industry trend had been in a relentless 'urge to demerge',
'addition by subtraction', and portfolio simplification, with the
market generally rewarding higher multiples to more pure-play
entities. Portfolios are arguably more simplified today than
ever before, and there is really only one remaining large
conglomerate that has not gone down the breakup path –
Honeywell." (RBC, April
2024)
IV. A Transformational Opportunity
There is a tremendous opportunity for value creation at
Honeywell. The unique combination of attractive assets, operational
underperformance, a significant valuation disconnect and an
actionable pathway for value realization creates the potential for
exceptional upside. It is this opportunity that led us to make a
multi-billion dollar investment in Honeywell.
In order to realize its full potential, we are recommending that
Honeywell pursue a separation of Aerospace and
Automation. While a transaction could take a wide range of
potential forms, Honeywell is in the enviable position of
possessing two industry-leading businesses – Aerospace and
Automation – in attractive end markets and with substantial scale.
Honeywell Aerospace would be a top-five global aerospace supplier,
while Honeywell Automation would be a large-cap multi-industrial
with annual revenue of nearly $20
billion.
A Separation is Actionable. Structurally, both
businesses are already largely independent and fully capable of
thriving on their own. The operations of Honeywell Aerospace are
already functionally separate; the business has its own management
team, physical headquarters, ERP and other technology systems,
manufacturing facilities, detailed financial reporting systems,
go-to-market organization, product development and validation team,
and supply chain. Some back-office functions and minor
inter-segment sales (e.g., sensors) are shared, but these are small
in magnitude and easily addressable.
Operationally, Honeywell has long instilled a level of immense
discipline throughout its organization. And because the ~100,000
employees who form the foundation of the Company's iconic Honeywell
Operating System will be the same ones shepherding its businesses
post-separation, their fundamental mindset of operational
excellence will ensure continuity. In fact, similar to all of the
precedent separations cited above, we would anticipate that
operational performance improves as part of a more focused and
dedicated company.
Financially, both businesses would be ~$100 billion entities, with robust financial
profiles, investment grade credit ratings and significant capital
availability. Finally, we recognize that a separation will take
time and incur costs. In our view, the one-time cash costs of
separation and any ongoing standalone costs will be vastly
outweighed by the ongoing operational and valuation benefits of
separation, as quantified below.
A Separation is in High Demand. The path we are
suggesting is not novel, and we are confident that many have
already suggested it to Honeywell's Board and management.
Honeywell's equity research analysts, many of whom have followed
the industrials sector for decades, have written at length about
the potential benefits of a separation. Similarly, our diligence
indicates that investors have a strong preference for streamlining
Honeywell: Our recent shareholder survey of Industrials investors –
a group representing 45% of Honeywell's shares outstanding,
excluding Elliott – overwhelmingly highlighted investor preferences
for pure-plays. Of the investors we surveyed, 81% stated
that pure-play industrial companies perform better than diversified
conglomerates.
While shareholders have long hoped for a separation, the current
environment presents a distinctly attractive opportunity to do so.
We are of course aware that Honeywell has considered the idea of
simplification in the past. However, what makes the current
situation different is the sheer amount of value that Honeywell can
create by pursuing simplification now.
Honeywell Aerospace
The outlook for aerospace suppliers appears brighter today than
it has in decades. Industry demand for both new and spare parts is
at record highs spurred by a global recovery in travel post-COVID
that has far outpaced the industry's ability to restore supply
commensurately. Quality issues at OEMs have further constrained
supply growth, while simultaneously affording significant pricing
power to high-quality suppliers in commercial negotiations. As a
result, suppliers are benefiting from the flywheel of a multi-year
production recovery coupled with improving pricing and
profitability, fueling strong earnings growth for the foreseeable
future.
Against this favorable market backdrop, Honeywell Aerospace is a
category leader with a near best-in-class financial profile and
enviable strategic positioning. It generates its profits primarily
from the commercial aftermarket where, relative to peers, Honeywell
has (i) a higher proportion of aftermarket revenue, (ii) a
higher-margin aftermarket business selling primarily spare parts
versus low-margin service work, and (iii) stickier aftermarket
revenue given industry-leading adoption of "power by the hour"
contracts. As a result, Honeywell Aerospace generates operating
margins that are second to only Transdigm's in the industry. What
differentiates Honeywell's business further is that it generates
this margin profile while also investing substantially more than
peers to develop industry-leading technology and solidify its
future growth potential.
See Exhibit 14: Honeywell Aerospace vs.
Comparable Peer Set.
The result is a high-quality aerospace business operating at the
forefront of technology, with near best-in-class margins and a
durable trajectory of growth ahead.
From a valuation perspective, Honeywell trades at 16.7x EBITDA -
CapEx today, compared to an aerospace peer set that trades between
18.6x and 31.3x. Based on its financial profile and strategic
position, we believe Honeywell Aerospace should be valued at a
premium relative to the average of its aerospace peer group. For
the sake of conservatism, in our Base Case, we assume a valuation
of 22.0x NTM EBITDA - CapEx, a discount to the peer median and only
a modest premium to Raytheon despite Honeywell Aerospace being a
faster-growing business with more than double the profit margins
and substantially less exposure to defense prime contracting
business. In our Upside Case, we assume a valuation of 24.0x NTM
EBITDA - CapEx, a modest premium to the peer median and, in our
view, a more reasonable valuation based on the business's financial
profile. Although not reflected in either case, there is
significant strategic upside optionality that could arise once the
Aerospace entity becomes a standalone entity.
See Exhibit 15: Aerospace Valuation in Context
– EV / 2025E EBITDA – CapEx.
Every valuation methodology we apply to Honeywell Aerospace
reinforces our strong conviction that, as a standalone entity, it
should be worth well over $100
billion. Separating Aerospace into an independent company
gives Honeywell the best chance of realizing this potential.
Honeywell Automation
Following its separation from Aerospace as well as the planned
dispositions of Advanced Materials and PPE, Honeywell Automation
will be a strong, pure-play automation company providing
industry-leading solutions for a diversified set of end
markets.
See Exhibit 16: Honeywell Automation
Pro Forma Portfolio.
Honeywell Automation holds leading positions in many key
categories, including global fire detection; distributed control
systems; downstream energy technology and catalysts; and renewable
energy and technology. Its primary businesses exhibit significant
barriers to entry supported by a global installed base accumulated
over decades of market leadership. This installed base provides a
valuable stream of recurring revenue through software, aftermarket
parts and services, and process catalysts.
While recent organic growth has fallen below expectations, we
believe this is largely due to explainable, non-recurring factors.
Specifically, idiosyncratic events in Warehouse,
Productivity and PPE drove significant historical declines,
but have begun to stabilize. Further, the opportunity for improved
performance as a more focused entity provides upside
optionality.
In Warehouse, a single customer representing roughly two-thirds
of revenue terminated its partnership with Honeywell in mid-2022,
but this customer loss is now largely out of the financials and the
underlying end-market growth remains robust. At the same time,
the Productivity segment suffered from short-cycle weakness and
channel de-stocking, but maintained market share and is poised to
benefit from the already emerging cyclical rebound. Lastly, PPE has
contributed to significant declines at Honeywell, as it has
struggled with the intense demand surge and unwind of COVID-related
revenues, exacerbated by its non-core status within the Honeywell
conglomerate. However, this business has been reclassified as held
for sale.
See Exhibit 17: Honeywell Automation – Recent
Underperformance.
Excluding these three businesses, which should no longer serve
as drags on Honeywell's financials, Honeywell Automation's
historical organic growth rate would have been ~5%, in line with
peers. With strong competitive differentiation and growing end
markets, Honeywell Automation enjoys attractive margins and a
forward growth profile in line with peers.
See Exhibit 18: Honeywell Automation vs.
Comparable Peer Set.
Today Honeywell trades at ~16.7x EBITDA - CapEx, compared to an
industrial peer set that trades between 17.1x and 25.5x. Despite
Honeywell Automation's in-line profitability and growth profile,
our Base Case takes the conservative step of assuming 17.0x NTM
EBITDA – CapEx, a multiple that remains at a discount to Fortive,
3M and every other diversified
industrial peer. Further, while our Base Case does not assume any
operating improvement, we would expect a more focused Honeywell
Automation to achieve superior operational performance, for all the
reasons described above. In our Upside Case, we assume a valuation
multiple of 18.5x NTM EBITDA - CapEx, a modest discount to the peer
median.
See Exhibit 19: Automation Valuation in
Context – EV / 2025E EBITDA – CapEx.
In short, we firmly believe that a stand-alone Honeywell
Automation would be a stronger, better-run business valued at
approximately $100 billion. By
separating from Aerospace and emerging as a coherent collection of
automation-focused assets, Honeywell Automation would represent an
attractive investment opportunity with an enhanced ability to
maximize its potential.
Value Creation Potential
We believe a separation of Aerospace and Automation could yield
share price gains of 51% – 75% over the next two years. The
Base Case below reflects our status quo estimates for each business
without assuming any operational uplift from separation. This
analysis yields a value per share of $330 by the end of 2026. As discussed above, we
fully expect that Aerospace and Automation will achieve superior
operational performance as streamlined and focused pure-plays. Our
Upside Case captures this potential for the more focused entities
to outperform once freed from the conglomerate structure, driving
additional organic growth and margin improvement as well as modest
multiple expansion. This analysis shows a value per share of
$383 by the end of 2026.
See Exhibit 20: Illustrative Value Creation
(As of Year-end 2016).
This level of value creation would be profound for any company,
let alone one of Honeywell's size. However, history would indicate
that these assumptions might ultimately prove too conservative.
Notably, in three of the most recent comparable examples – United
Technologies, GE and Ingersoll Rand – the realized upside from
these portfolio moves far exceeded any initial expectations
at the time of announcement.
While analysts initially estimated an average of just 10–25%
upside from separating these former conglomerates, the actual value
creation achieved has been substantially greater –
Ingersoll Rand generated
$100 billion of value from
announcement to today, United Technologies $140 billion and GE $150
billion. In each case, improved business performance drove
both higher earnings and increased valuations, leading to a level
of value creation far exceeding any forecasts at the time these
portfolio changes were announced. We believe this same opportunity
exists for Honeywell today.
"SOTP just doesn't work,
mostly because it uses current profits - not the profits generated
by a more dynamic entity and it uses P/E or EV/EBITDA comps that
are often circular and point to 'average' when spin-off eps growth
is often well above average. What the data tells us and our
experience with north of 25 spin-offs is that we always seem to
underestimate how a focused spin-off entity can create value."
(Barclays, May 2017)
See Exhibit 21: Estimated SOTP Upside at
Announcement vs. Actual Realized TSR.
V. The Path Forward
We hope this letter is received in the same spirit in which it
is shared: A desire to work together to help Honeywell achieve its
full potential. Honeywell consists of a collection of
market-leading assets, run with an operating system that is the
envy of the industry. Despite these advantages, we believe that
Honeywell's underlying value far exceeds the value that the market
has assigned it today. We suspect the Board and management team
agree.
Honeywell is at an inflection point. While its performance has
lagged, its market positioning remains sound, and comparable
valuations continue to reach new highs. The case for change is
clear and compelling, and the path to achieving that change is
straightforward: allowing Honeywell Aerospace and Honeywell
Automation to stand on their own. We hope you share our view – and
the growing market consensus – that now is the right time
for Honeywell to take this step in its evolution.
We would like to conclude by requesting an opportunity to meet
in person to expand upon the analysis above, to hear your views on
this opportunity, and to advance our shared commitment to
Honeywell's success. We are available to meet at your earliest
convenience.
Sincerely,
Marc Steinberg
Partner
Jesse Cohn
Managing Partner
About Elliott
Elliott Investment Management L.P. (together with its
affiliates, "Elliott") manages approximately $69.7
billion of assets as of June 30, 2024. Founded in 1977,
it is one of the oldest funds under continuous management. The
Elliott funds' investors include pension plans, sovereign wealth
funds, endowments, foundations, funds-of-funds, high net worth
individuals and families, and employees of the firm.
1
|
As of June 30,
2024.
|
2
|
Emphasis added to
quotes throughout this letter.
|
3
|
Note: Throughout this
letter, we value Honeywell and its peers using an earnings-based
methodology, specifically EV / EBITDA – CapEx. This approach
accounts for Honeywell's relatively lower capital intensity, the
differences in capital structure among peers, and is the best
measure of approximating segment-level cash flow.
|
Media Contact:
Casey Friedman
Elliott Investment Management L.P.
(212) 478-1780
cFriedman@elliottmgmt.com
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SOURCE Elliott Investment Management L.P.