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Honeywell sales forecasts fail due to ongoing supply-chain disturbances

Honeywell predicted annual sales below Wall Street expectations and missed quarterly revenue price quotes on Thursday as the industrial giant battles with persistent supplychain disruptions and weak point in its industrial automation company.

The automation section, which helps factories and plants mechanize their manufacturing procedures, reported a 5% decrease in natural sales for the 3rd quarter, generally due to soft demand from storage facilities.

Industrial automation has actually had a hard time for a long time now due to extended headwinds in the Intelligrated storage facility automation organization, said Jake Levinson, an analyst at Melius Research.

They rode the pandemic-driven boom in warehouse building, especially as it connects to Amazon. However the overhang from that cycle has been painful, he said.

The business's shares fell nearly 5% in afternoon trade.

In a post-earnings call with analysts, executives stated some discrete supply-chain snags in aerospace prodded the business to reassess its expectations for the year, while Cyclone Helene interrupted some production.

GE Aerospace earlier in the week blamed supply-chain restrictions for a decline in jet engine deliveries that is weighing on its profits.

Honeywell CEO Vimal Kapur also attended to the near six-weeks employees strike at consumer Boeing.

The Boeing circumstances are certainly extremely difficult. We all saw the outcomes of the vote yesterday night, which is unfortunate, he said.

However, need from Boeing has not dropped demonstrably. from before the strike, Honeywell said.

The business approximated general 2024 sales in between $38.6. billion and $38.8 billion, compared with experts' average. estimate of $39.20 billion, according to information put together by LSEG.

Honeywell said on Thursday it was wanting to divest its. personal protective equipment service to additional simplify its. operations, as part of CEO Kapur's focus on the so-called mega. trends of automation, the future of air travel and energy. shift.

Total sales increased 5.6% to $9.73 billion in the quarter ended. Sept. 30, falling short of quotes of $9.90 billion.

(source: Reuters)