HON

Honeywell Price

Closed
HON
$228.00
+$3.19(+1.41%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-23 00:11 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-23 00:11, Honeywell (HON) is priced at $228.00, with a total market cap of $144.42B, a P/E ratio of 26.36, and a dividend yield of 2.06%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $222.55 and $228.98. The current price is 2.44% above the day's low and 0.42% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 5.07M. Over the past 52 weeks, HON has traded between $186.76 to $248.30, and the current price is -8.17% away from the 52-week high.

HON Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$223.80
Market Cap$144.42B
Volume5.07M
P/E Ratio26.36
Dividend Yield (TTM)2.06%
Dividend Amount$1.19
Diluted EPS (TTM)6.46
Net Income (FY)$4.72B
Revenue (FY)$37.44B
Earnings Date2026-07-23
EPS Estimate2.46
Revenue Estimate$9.55B
Shares Outstanding645.31M
Beta (1Y)0.811
Ex-Dividend Date2026-05-15
Dividend Payment Date2026-06-05

About HON

Honeywell International Inc. operates as a diversified technology and manufacturing company worldwide. Its Aerospace segment offers auxiliary power units, propulsion engines, integrated avionics, environmental control and electric power systems, engine controls, flight safety, communications, navigation hardware, data and software applications, radar and surveillance systems, aircraft lighting, advanced systems and instruments, satellite and space components, and aircraft wheels and brakes; spare parts; repair, overhaul, and maintenance services; thermal systems, as well as wireless connectivity and management services. The company's Honeywell Building Technologies segment offers software applications for building control and optimization; sensors, switches, control systems, and instruments for energy management; access control; video surveillance; fire products; and installation, maintenance, and upgrades of systems. Its Performance Materials and Technologies segment offers automation control, instrumentation, and software and related services; catalysts and adsorbents, equipment, and consulting; and materials to manufacture end products, such as bullet-resistant armor, nylon, computer chips, and pharmaceutical packaging, as well as provides reduced and low global-warming-potential materials based on hydrofluoro-olefin technology. The company's Safety and Productivity Solutions segment provides personal protection equipment, apparel, gear, and footwear; gas detection technology; cloud-based notification and emergency messaging; mobile devices and software; supply chain and warehouse automation equipment, and software solutions; custom-engineered sensors, switches, and controls; and data and asset management productivity software solutions. The company was founded in 1906 and is headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina.
SectorIndustrials
IndustryConglomerates
CEOVimal Kapur
HeadquartersCharlotte,NC,US
Employees (FY)19.00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$1.97M
Net Income per Employee$248.89K

Honeywell (HON) FAQ

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Honeywell (HON) is currently trading at $228.00, with a 24h change of +1.41%. The 52-week trading range is $186.76–$248.30.

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Honeywell (HON) Latest News

2026-05-19 08:38Echo Protocol Exploited on Monad, $867K in WBTC Borrowed Through Compromised eBTCAccording to Onchain Lens, the Bitcoin-focused DeFi protocol Echo suffered an exploit on Monday at 5:55 p.m. ET targeting its eBTC token on Monad. The attacker minted 1,000 eBTC and deposited 45 eBTC to lending protocol Curvance as collateral to borrow 11.29 WBTC, worth approximately $867,700. The exploiter then bridged the WBTC to Ethereum, swapped it into 385 ETH, and transferred the funds to crypto mixer Tornado Cash. Monad Co-founder Keone Hon confirmed that approximately $816,000 was stolen in the exploit. Echo Protocol announced Tuesday morning that the attack originated from a compromised admin key affecting the Monad deployment. The protocol regained control of the keys and burned the remaining 955 eBTC held by the attacker. Curvance said its isolated market architecture prevented broader contagion and paused the affected eBTC market out of caution.2026-05-19 05:13Monad Network Unaffected and Operational Amid Echo Protocol $816K Vulnerability on May 19According to Monad co-founder Keone Hon, the Monad network remained unaffected and operational on May 19, while security researchers investigated an Echo Protocol eBTC vulnerability. The vulnerability resulted in approximately $816,000 stolen.2026-05-15 00:51Foxconn Q1 Net Income Rises 19% to NT$49.9B on AI Server DemandAccording to Bloomberg, Hon Hai Precision Industry, also known as Foxconn, reported first-quarter net income rose 19% year-on-year to NT$49.9 billion (US$1.6 billion), driven by sustained AI server demand. Quarterly sales jumped 30% to approximately NT$2.1 trillion (US$66.6 billion). The company expects substantial sales growth this year as AI demand continues. CEO Michael Chiang said the U.S. will become Hon Hai's largest AI server production hub, given that most cloud customers are located there. Foxconn also flagged supply chain risks from the Middle East situation and rising memory chip prices.2026-05-05 23:47Hon Hai April Revenue Jumps 29.7% to NT$832.1B on AI DemandAccording to Bloomberg, Hon Hai Precision Industry reported on May 5 that April revenue rose 29.7% year-on-year to NT$832.1 billion (US$26.3 billion), driven by strong spending on AI hardware. The Taiwanese electronics manufacturer assembles servers using Nvidia accelerators and expects second quarter sales to increase from both the previous quarter and year-on-year.2026-04-28 12:45Monad Co-founder Clarifies Official X Account Freeze, Denies Abnormal ActivityGate News message, April 28 — Monad co-founder Keone Hon issued a statement clarifying that the project's official X account was frozen without warning, which the team believes is likely a misclassification. Hon stated that Monad has not engaged in any abnormal operations and has been using API functions normally. The team has reached out to X support through multiple channels and expects the account to be restored soon.

Hot Posts About Honeywell (HON)

StakeTillRetire

StakeTillRetire

05-20 09:39
Recently, I found that many people are still somewhat unfamiliar with the concept of US stock ADRs. In fact, this thing is quite important for those who want to invest in overseas companies. Simply put, ADR is an American Depositary Receipt, allowing foreign companies to be listed on the US stock market and making it easier for American investors to buy foreign company stocks. Let me first explain how ADR works. Foreign companies hand over their stocks to a US depositary bank, which then issues ADR certificates, so the stocks can circulate in the US stock market. For example, Taiwan's TSMC is listed in Taiwan with the code 2330, but after issuing ADRs in the US, the code becomes TSM, allowing direct trading on the NYSE. For investors, buying ADRs is as convenient as buying regular US stocks, without needing to open a Taiwanese brokerage account. Why do foreign companies issue ADRs? Mainly because the US market is the world's largest and most active capital market. Many companies are already listed in their home countries but do not want to go through the complex process of secondary listing. Issuing ADRs simplifies the process and also allows them to raise funds in the US, achieving two goals at once. For investors, without ADRs, buying foreign stocks means opening local accounts, currency exchange, and bearing exchange rate risks, which is quite troublesome. ADRs are divided into sponsored and unsponsored types. Sponsored ADRs are issued through agreements between the company and the bank, requiring compliance with SEC regulations, periodic financial disclosures, and are relatively lower risk. Unsponsored ADRs may have no company involvement and can only be traded over-the-counter (OTC), which carries higher risk. Additionally, ADRs are categorized into three levels: Level 1 can only be traded OTC, while Levels 2 and 3 can be listed on NASDAQ or NYSE, with higher levels subject to stricter regulation. Here’s an important concept called the ADR ratio. ADRs are not a one-to-one match with foreign stocks. For example, TSMC’s ADR ratio is 1:5, meaning five shares of TSMC in Taiwan equal one ADR. Hon Hai (Foxconn) is also 1:5, but Chunghwa Telecom is 1:10. The company sets the ratio mainly based on the foreign stock price and exchange rate; if the stock price is too high and hampers trading, they will adjust the ratio to improve liquidity. There are many differences between Taiwan stocks and Taiwan ADRs. First, their nature differs: Taiwan stocks are actual shares, while ADRs are certificates. They are traded in different locations: Taiwan stocks on the Taiwan Stock Exchange, ADRs on NYSE or NASDAQ. Their codes and regulatory bodies are also different. Most importantly, due to different trading venues and investor groups, the stock price movements of the same company can differ, sometimes resulting in premiums or discounts. For example, TSMC ADRs sometimes have a price higher than the Taiwan stock price after conversion, which is a premium. Some investors exploit this difference for arbitrage. When investing in ADRs, several key points should be considered. First is liquidity: foreign companies may not be well-known overseas, and trading ADRs often involves fewer investors, leading to much lower trading volume than domestic markets. Next is the company’s fundamentals—understanding its operational status and industry outlook. Also, pay attention to exchange rate risk, since ADRs are traded in USD, and fluctuations in the dollar directly impact your returns. For example, a 20% profit could be wiped out or turned into a loss if the USD depreciates. The advantage of ADRs is lower trading costs. Taiwanese investors trading ADRs with profits under 1 million yuan do not need to pay income tax, and overseas brokers usually charge very low or zero handling fees, much cheaper than Taiwan’s transaction taxes and fees. Additionally, the investment options are more diverse—you can invest in US companies as well as Chinese and Taiwanese companies’ ADRs simultaneously. For example, if you want to invest in electric vehicle companies, you can look at both Tesla and NIO. However, there are also many disadvantages. For Taiwanese investors, you need to open an overseas broker account, exchange NT dollars for USD, and deposit funds before trading, which involves higher upfront costs and more complicated procedures. If you buy through a Taiwanese broker’s proxy service, the handling fee is about 1-2%, which is more expensive than directly buying ADRs. The biggest risk remains exchange rate fluctuations; changes in USD/TWD exchange rates will directly affect your actual returns, and this is a cost you must bear when investing in ADRs. Overall, ADRs are a good option for investing in overseas companies, especially well-known foreign enterprises. But before investing, you must understand the mechanisms, ratios, liquidity, and other factors of ADRs, and be mentally prepared for exchange rate volatility. Recently, I’ve also seen many people on Gate paying attention to various overseas assets. In fact, understanding how ADRs work can be very helpful for making investment decisions.
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