New York, Feb 13, 2026, 18:25 EST — After-hours
- Honeywell ended the day up 0.65% at $241.38, with after-hours trading barely moving the needle. 1
- Honeywell set its quarterly dividend at $1.19 per share, to be paid out on March 13. Shareholders on record as of Feb. 27 will qualify. 2
- Honeywell is set to appear at Barclays’ investor conference in Miami on Feb. 17, followed by a presentation at Citi’s event a day later, Feb. 18. 3
Honeywell International Inc climbed 0.6% to $241.38 during Friday’s session, staying flat post-market after announcing its latest quarterly dividend. The industrial giant set a payout of $1.19 per share, payable March 13 to shareholders of record as of Feb. 27—mark your calendars if you’re looking for eligibility. 4
U.S. stocks found their footing after fresh data pointed to cooling inflation last month, sending Treasury yields down. Equity markets in the U.S. are shuttered Monday for Presidents Day, leaving a longer break between Friday’s finish and the next full session on Tuesday. 5
Honeywell shares are facing a key short-term event. CEO Vimal Kapur is on the docket for the Barclays Industrial Select Conference Feb. 17, then he’s set to appear at the Citi 2026 Global Industrial Tech and Mobility Conference Feb. 18. The company confirmed live audio webcasts for both, streaming on Honeywell’s investor site. 6
Honeywell shares have bounced near their recent highs, tapping $245.63 in intraday trading on Thursday before slipping 1.18% by the close, price data from Investing.com shows. The stock picked up some ground on Friday, though gains trailed Parker Hannifin’s almost 2% jump. Danaher was down more than 1% that day, capping off a mixed stretch for industrials. 7
The dividend comes as Honeywell continues shifting its portfolio. In its Jan. 29 earnings release, the company projected the spin-off of Honeywell Aerospace to take place in the third quarter of 2026, and put forward a 2026 adjusted EPS outlook between $10.35 and $10.65. Kapur noted Honeywell wrapped up 2025 with a “record backlog of over $37 billion,” positioning the group for the following year. 8
On the aerospace side, leadership has been getting reshuffled ahead of the planned split. Deere’s CFO Joshua Jepsen is stepping down and will become CFO at Honeywell’s aerospace division, effective Feb. 23, according to Reuters. That business continues to face rising costs and tariff headwinds. 9
There’s also spillover from Honeywell’s former unit. Solstice Advanced Materials, which separated from Honeywell in October, put out a 2026 earnings outlook Wednesday that landed short of what analysts were looking for. CEO David Sewell told Reuters the company is focusing on “secular growth trends,” pointing to AI data center demand. 10
The stock’s climb near its 52-week high means there’s little cushion now for mistakes. If aerospace aftermarket demand wobbles, automation spending fails to accelerate, or costs creep back up, shares could come under pressure—particularly if management’s upcoming comments don’t go further than what was laid out in January.
Markets are set for a subdued Monday, with the NYSE marking Washington’s Birthday on Feb. 16, and trading back in action Tuesday. Honeywell will present at Barclays at 8:40 a.m. EST, while Citi’s event lands Wednesday at 11:20 a.m. EST. The dividend record date? Feb. 27. 11