Honeywell International Inc. (Honeywell (HON)) is getting ready for its big breakup, and now we know what the two halves will be called. On Monday, the company unveiled the brand identities for its two businesses ahead of the planned June 29 aerospace spin-off.
After the separation, Honeywell's automation business will operate as Honeywell Technologies and continue trading under the ticker HON. The aerospace unit will become Honeywell Aerospace and trade under the new ticker HONA.
Chairman and CEO Vimal Kapur said the new brands reflect each company's independent growth strategy while building on Honeywell's 140-year legacy. Honeywell Technologies will focus on industrial automation and autonomy solutions, while Honeywell Aerospace will operate as a pure-play aerospace supplier focused on aviation technology, electrification, and autonomous flight.
The aerospace unit will host an investor day on June 3 in Phoenix, and Honeywell Technologies will hold its investor day on June 11 in New York.
As for the stock, HON was down 0.33% in Monday's premarket session, though that seems more about market positioning than any company-specific news. Nasdaq futures rose 0.27%, and S&P 500 futures gained 0.32%. Honeywell has been on a strong multi-month rally and remains close to its 52-week high, which can make stocks more sensitive to sentiment shifts and profit-taking.
The broader trend is still positive. Honeywell trades 11.7% above its 200-day simple moving average (SMA) of $212.30 and 7.7% above its 20-day SMA of $220.07. Those levels suggest buyers are still in control over the intermediate and long term. The stock also retains support from the golden cross that formed in February, when the 50-day SMA crossed above the 200-day SMA — a classic bullish signal that has helped reinforce the trend despite periodic pullbacks.
But momentum is getting stretched. Honeywell's relative strength index (RSI) stands at 70.58, putting the stock in overbought territory. An RSI above 70 often means a rally has come fast and may be due for a pause or consolidation. The moving-average setup is a bit mixed: while Honeywell remains above its key trend lines, the 20-day SMA is still below the 50-day SMA. That bearish crossover suggests the short-term trend hasn't fully caught up with the recent price strength.
Overall, the technical picture remains constructive, but elevated momentum readings suggest traders might see some consolidation before the next sustained move higher.
Key Resistance: $245.50 — a nearby ceiling just below the 52-week high zone ($248.18), where upside attempts can stall.
Key Support: $208.00 — a prior demand area near the longer-term trend zone (around the 200-day averages), a key level for bulls to defend on deeper pullbacks.
Honeywell shares were down 0.17% at $237.45 during premarket trading on Monday.






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