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HONEYWELL REPORTS FIRST QUARTER RESULTS AND REAFFIRMS 2026 OUTLOOK; ANNOUNCES SALE OF WAREHOUSE AND WORKFLOW SOLUTIONS

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Orders Up 7% Leading to ~$38 Billion BacklogSales of $9.1 Billion, Reported and Organic1 Sales Up 2%Operating Margin of 16.1% and Segment Margin1 of 23.3%Earnings Per Share (EPS) of $1.29, Down (35%) and Adjusted EPS1 of $2.45, Up 11%Honeywell Aerospace Spin-off Planned for Third Quarter (June 29, 2026)

CHARLOTTE, N.C., April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Honeywell (NASDAQ: HON) today announced results for the first quarter and also announced an agreement to sell its Warehouse and Workflow Solutions (WWS) business in an all-cash transaction to American Industrial Partners. This transaction and the previously announced sale of Productivity Solutions and Services (PSS) are both expected to close in the second half of 2026. The company today also updated the expected timing for the spin-off of Honeywell Aerospace to June 29, 2026, subject to final approval by Honeywell’s Board of Directors and other customary conditions.

First-quarter reported and organic1 sales grew 2% driven primarily by pricing actions and new product introductions. Orders grew 7% organically fueled by strong demand in Building and Industrial Automation. As a result, backlog was up 2% sequentially to $38.3 billion.

Operating income decreased 14% and segment profit1 increased 6% to $2.1 billion with growth in all four segments. Operating margin contracted 320 basis points to 16.1% due to an impairment charge related to the PSS and WWS assets held for sale, and higher repositioning and divestiture-related costs. Excluding these and other items, segment margin1 expanded 90 basis points to 23.3%, driven by higher pricing and earlier-than-anticipated removal of stranded costs related to the planned spin-off of Honeywell Aerospace, which more than offset higher cost inflation.

EPS for the first quarter of $1.29 was down 35% year over year due to charges related to debt restructuring, impairment of assets held for sale, repositioning, and other separation-related items. Excluding these items, adjusted earnings per share1 was up 11% to $2.45 primarily driven by segment profit growth and lower weighted-average share count.

Finally, operating cash flow of ($0.7) billion declined year over year due to higher spin-off and separation-related cost payments and a payment for the settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters. Free cash flow1,4 of $0.1 billion was down year over year primarily due to the timing of collections, stemming partially from the Middle East conflict.

Table 1: Summary of Honeywell Financial Results

(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts)

 

1Q 2026

1Q 2025

Change

Sales

$9,143

$8,925

2 %

Organic1 Growth

2 %

Operating Income

$1,474

$1,721

(14 %)

Operating Income Margin

16.1 %

19.3 %

(320 bps)

Segment Profit1

$2,129

$2,002

6 %

Segment Margin1

23.3 %

22.4 %

90 bps

Earnings Per Share – Continuing Operations

$1.29

$1.97

(35 %)

Adjusted Earnings Per Share1

$2.45

$2.21

11 %

Cash Flow from Operations – Continuing Operations

($650)

$378

(272 %)

Free Cash Flow1,4

$56

$191

(71 %)

Management Commentary
“Honeywell delivered a strong start to the year while navigating a challenging geopolitical environment. Orders were up 7% with growth in all segments, pushing backlog to over $38 billion, led by buildings and industrial automation. Through our relentless focus on productivity and execution, we generated 90 basis points of segment margin expansion. This profitable growth, coupled with an acceleration in stranded costs takeout, drove 11% adjusted earnings growth, overcoming the impacts of rising inflation and the disruption in the Middle East. This is a testament to the resiliency of the Honeywell portfolio,” said Vimal Kapur, chairman and chief executive officer of Honeywell.

“This quarter, we took the final steps to conclude our multi-year portfolio transformation with our announcements to sell Productivity Solutions and Services and Warehouse and Workflow Solutions, both of which are expected to close in the second half of 2026. Further, the Honeywell Aerospace spin-off is now expected to be completed in the third quarter on June 29. All of the acquisitions, divestitures, spin-offs and simplification efforts over the last several years have positioned both aerospace and automation for bright futures as independent, leading companies, and we look forward to sharing more at the upcoming investor days in June,” Kapur concluded.

Table 2: Summary of Segment Financial Results

(Dollars in millions)

 

AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGIES

1Q 2026

1Q 2025

Change

Sales

$4,322

$4,172

4 %

Organic1 Growth

3 %

Segment Profit

$1,144

$1,099

4 %

Segment Margin

26.5 %

26.3 %

20 bps

BUILDING AUTOMATION

Sales

$1,882

$1,692

11 %

Organic1 Growth

8 %

Segment Profit

$496

$440

13 %

Segment Margin

26.4 %

26.0 %

40 bps

PROCESS AUTOMATION AND TECHNOLOGY

Sales

$1,513

$1,445

5 %

Organic1 Growth

(6 %)

Segment Profit

$359

$313

15 %

Segment Margin

23.7 %

21.7 %

200 bps

INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION

Sales

$1,421

$1,597

(11 %)

Organic1 Growth

1 %

Segment Profit

$241

$230

5 %

Segment Margin

17.0 %

14.4 %

260 bps

Aerospace Technologies sales for the first quarter grew 3% organically1 year over year. Orders increased 6% compared to the previous year, with a book-to-bill of 1.1x, reflecting the continued elevated demand environment. Electronic solutions delivered strong double-digit growth in the quarter as shipment volumes better aligned to customer build schedules. Temporary mechanical supply chain disruptions pressured output growth across the segment, limiting sales growth in engines and power systems and control systems. Defense and space sales grew 4% driven by expanding global demand amid escalating geopolitical conflict. Commercial original equipment increased 3% as customer order patterns aligned to build schedules. Commercial aftermarket sales grew 3% with ongoing demand strength across the installed base. Segment margin expanded 20 basis points from the prior year to 26.5% as commercial excellence, productivity, and favorable mix were partially offset by cost inflation.

Building Automation sales grew 8% organically1 year over year. By business model, building solutions grew 8% driven by strength in services, and building products grew 8% highlighted by double-digit growth in the fire business, particularly in North America. Orders increased 9% led by growth in data center and hospitality verticals. Segment margin expanded 40 basis points to 26.4%, supported by commercial excellence and volume leverage, partially offset by cost inflation.

Process Automation and Technology sales decreased 6% organically1 year over year, driven by declines in aftermarket, which was down 10% due to delays in refining catalyst shipments and automation service upgrades. Projects sales were flat organically, as double-digit growth in LNG was offset by delays in process automation. PA&T saw an overall slowdown in activity in the Middle East stemming from the conflict which caused a transitory impact on revenue in the quarter. Despite this, orders were up 3% driven by double-digit growth in process technology. Segment margin expanded 200 basis points to 23.7%, driven primarily by productivity actions, partially offset by cost inflation.

Industrial Automation sales grew 1% year over year on an organic1 basis. Solutions grew 7% driven by project timing and aftermarket demand in warehouse and workflow solutions and strong services demand in measurement. Products declined 1% driven by productivity solutions and services, partially offset by continued momentum in sensing. Segment margin expanded 260 basis points year over year to 17.0% driven by commercial excellence and productivity actions, partially offset by cost inflation.

Table 3: Full-Year 2026 Guidance1

 

Previous Guidance

Current Guidance

Sales

$38.8B – $39.8B

$38.8B – $39.8B

Organic Growth

3% – 6%

3% – 6%

Segment Margin2

22.7% – 23.1%

22.7% – 23.1%

Expansion5

Up 20 – 60 bps

Up 20 – 60 bps

Adjusted Earnings Per Share2,3

$10.35 – $10.65

$10.35 – $10.65

Adjusted Earnings Growth3

6% – 9%

6% – 9%

Operating Cash Flow

$4.7B – $5.0B

$4.4B – $4.7B

Free Cash Flow4

$5.3B – $5.6B

$5.3B – $5.6B

Free Cash Flow Growth4

4% – 10%

4% – 10%

1

See additional information at the end of this release regarding non-GAAP financial measures.

2

Segment margin and adjusted EPS are non-GAAP financial measures. Management cannot reliably predict or estimate, without unreasonable effort, the impact and timing on future operating results arising from items excluded from segment margin and adjusted EPS. We therefore, do not present a guidance range, or a reconciliation to, the nearest GAAP financial measures of operating margin or EPS.

3

Adjusted EPS and adjusted EPS V% guidance excludes items identified in the non-GAAP reconciliation of adjusted EPS at the end of this release, and any potential future one-time items that we cannot reliably predict or estimate such as pension mark-to-market.

4

With respect to historical periods, free cash flow adjusts for capital expenditures, spin-off and separation-related cost payments, Resideo indemnification and reimbursement agreement termination payment, cash payment for settlement of the divestiture of asbestos liabilities, and cash payment for settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters. With respect to the company’s outlook for 2026, free cash flow adjusts for capital expenditures, spin-off and separation-related cost payments, and cash payment for settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters.

5

Segment margin expansion as compared to adjusted segment margin in 2025.

2026 Outlook
The company is maintaining its full-year outlook after a strong first quarter despite the uncertainty stemming from the Middle East conflict. We continue to expect full-year sales of $38.8 billion to $39.8 billion with organic1 sales growth of 3% to 6%; segment margin2 in the range of 22.7% to 23.1%, with segment margin2,5 expansion of 20 to 60 basis points year over year; and adjusted earnings per share2,3  in the range of $10.35 to $10.65, up 6% to 9%. Operating cash flow is now expected to be in the range of $4.4 billion to $4.7 billion, while free cash flow1,4 expectations are unchanged at $5.3 billion to $5.6 billion.

Sale of Warehouse and Workflow Solutions Business
Honeywell announced today that it has agreed to sell its Warehouse and Workflow Solutions (WWS) business to American Industrial Partners (AIP), an operationally focused private equity firm that invests in quality industrial businesses with strong management teams. The transaction is expected to be completed in the second half of 2026 and is subject to customary closing conditions. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

This concludes Honeywell’s review of strategic alternatives for the WWS business, which operates commercially under the Intelligrated and Transnorm brands. WWS, which generated approximately $935 million in revenue in 2025, is a leading provider of supply chain and warehouse automation projects, services and products – including automated sortation systems, palletizers, conveyors and robotics solutions as well as aftermarket services and software. WWS will build on AIP’s existing investment in Trew, creating a complementary and differentiated platform to better serve customers across a wide range of industries.

As part of the same strategic review, Honeywell also announced on April 20 that it has agreed to sell its Productivity Solutions and Services business to Brady Corporation.

Upcoming Investor Day Details
The company earlier announced dates for its upcoming investor days ahead of the planned separation of Honeywell Aerospace, now expected to be completed in the third quarter on June 29, 2026. Honeywell Aerospace, which will trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker “HONA”, will host a live webcast of its inaugural investor conference in Phoenix, Arizona on Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Honeywell will then host a live video webcast of its 2026 investor conference in New York City on Thursday, June 11, 2026 for the automation business. Both events will feature presentations and Q&A panels with the respective management teams. Real-time webcasts of the presentations can be accessed at www.honeywell.com/investor, where related materials will be posted following presentations and a replay of the webcasts will be available for 30 days following the presentations.

Conference Call Details
Honeywell will discuss its first-quarter results and full-year 2026 guidance during an investor conference call starting at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time today. A live webcast of the investor call as well as related presentation materials will be available through the Investor Relations section of the company’s website (www.honeywell.com/investor). A replay of the webcast will be available for 30 days following the presentation.

About Honeywell
Honeywell is an integrated operating company serving a broad range of industries and geographies around the world, with a portfolio that is underpinned by our Honeywell Accelerator operating system and Honeywell Forge platform. As a trusted partner, we help organizations solve the world’s toughest, most complex challenges, providing actionable solutions and innovations for aerospace, building automation, industrial automation, process automation, and process technology, that help make the world smarter and safer as well as more secure and sustainable. For more news and information on Honeywell, please visit www.honeywell.com/newsroom.

Additional Information
Honeywell uses our Investor Relations website, www.honeywell.com/investor, as a means of disclosing information which may be of interest or material to our investors and for complying with disclosure obligations under Regulation FD. Accordingly, investors should monitor our Investor Relations website, in addition to following our press releases, SEC filings, public conference calls, webcasts, and social media.

Forward Looking Statements
We describe many of the trends and other factors that drive our business and future results in this release. Such discussions contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange Act), including statements related to the proposed separation of Honeywell from Honeywell Aerospace and the planned sales of the Productivity Solutions and Services and Warehouse and Workflow Solutions businesses. Forward-looking statements are those that address activities, events, or developments that we or our management intend, expect, project, believe, or anticipate will or may occur in the future. They are based on management’s assumptions and assessments in light of past experience and trends, current economic and industry conditions, expected future developments, and other relevant factors, many of which are difficult to predict and outside of our control, including Honeywell’s current expectations, estimates, and projections regarding the proposed separation of Honeywell from Honeywell Aerospace and the planned sales of the Productivity Solutions and Services and Warehouse and Workflow Solutions businesses. They are not guarantees of future performance, and actual results, developments, and business decisions may differ significantly from those envisaged by our forward-looking statements, including the proposed separation of Honeywell from Honeywell Aerospace and the planned sales of the Productivity Solutions and Services and Warehouse and Workflow Solutions businesses, and the anticipated benefits of each. We do not undertake to update or revise any of our forward-looking statements, except as required by applicable securities law. Our forward-looking statements are also subject to material risks and uncertainties, including ongoing macroeconomic and geopolitical risks, such as changes in or application of trade and tax laws and policies, including the impacts of tariffs and other trade barriers and restrictions, lower GDP growth or recession in the U.S. or globally, supply chain disruptions, capital markets volatility, inflation, and certain regional conflicts, including ongoing conflicts in the Middle East, that can affect our performance in both the near- and long-term. In addition, no assurance can be given that any plan, initiative, projection, goal, commitment, expectation, or prospect set forth in this release can or will be achieved. These forward-looking statements should be considered in light of the information included in this release, our Form 10-K, and our other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Any forward-looking plans described herein are not final and may be modified or abandoned at any time.

This release contains financial measures presented on a non-GAAP basis. Honeywell’s non-GAAP financial measures used in this release are as follows:

Segment profit, on an overall Honeywell basis;Segment profit margin, on an overall Honeywell basis;Organic sales growth;Free cash flow; andAdjusted earnings per share.

Management believes that, when considered together with reported amounts, these measures are useful to investors and management in understanding our ongoing operations and in the analysis of ongoing operating trends. These measures should be considered in addition to, and not as replacements for, the most comparable GAAP measure. Certain measures presented on a non-GAAP basis represent the impact of adjusting items net of tax. The tax-effect for adjusting items is determined individually and on a case-by-case basis. Refer to the Appendix attached to this release for reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures.

Honeywell International Inc.

Consolidated Statement of Operations (Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts)

 

Three Months Ended
March 31,

2026

2025

Product sales

$   5,867

$   5,807

Service sales

3,276

3,118

Net sales

9,143

8,925

Costs, expenses and other

Cost of products sold

3,863

3,723

Cost of services sold

1,741

1,740

Total Cost of products and services sold

5,604

5,463

Research and development expenses

492

416

Selling, general and administrative expenses

1,310

1,310

Impairment of assets held for sale

263

15

Loss on debt extinguishment

239

Other (income) expense

(7)

(229)

Interest and other financial charges

356

285

Total costs, expenses and other

8,257

7,260

Income from continuing operations before taxes

886

1,665

Tax expense

91

369

Net income from continuing operations

795

1,296

Net income from discontinued operations

171

Net income

795

1,467

Less: Net (loss) income attributable to noncontrolling interest

(26)

18

Net income attributable to Honeywell

$     821

$   1,449

Earnings per share of common stock—basic:

Earnings per share of common stock from continuing operations—basic

$    1.29

$    1.99

Earnings per share of common stock from discontinued operations—basic

0.25

Total earnings per share of common stock—basic

$    1.29

$    2.24

Earnings per share of common stock—assuming dilution:

Earnings per share of common stock from continuing operations—assuming dilution

$    1.29

$    1.97

Earnings per share of common stock from discontinued operations—assuming dilution

0.25

Total earnings per share of common stock—assuming dilution

$    1.29

$    2.22

Weighted average number of shares outstanding – basic

634.7

648.2

Weighted average number of shares outstanding – assuming dilution

638.4

651.7

 

Honeywell International Inc.

Segment Data (Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions)

 

Three Months Ended March 31,

Net sales

2026

2025

Aerospace Technologies

$       4,322

$       4,172

Building Automation

1,882

1,692

Process Automation and Technology

1,513

1,445

Industrial Automation

1,421

1,597

Corporate and All Other

5

19

Total Net sales

$       9,143

$       8,925

 

Reconciliation of Segment Profit to Income Before Taxes

 

Three Months Ended March 31,

Segment profit

2026

2025

Aerospace Technologies

$       1,144

$       1,099

Building Automation

496

440

Process Automation and Technology

359

313

Industrial Automation

241

230

Corporate and All Other

(111)

(80)

Total Segment profit

2,129

2,002

Interest and other financial charges

(356)

(285)

Interest income1

90

91

Amortization of acquisition-related intangibles2

(153)

(135)

Impairment of assets held for sale

(263)

(15)

Stock compensation expense3

(57)

(59)

Pension ongoing income4

164

126

Pension mark-to-market expense4

14

Other postretirement income4

2

4

Repositioning and other gains (charges)5,6

(68)

(43)

Loss on debt extinguishment

(239)

Divestiture-related costs7

(314)

(11)

Other expense8

(49)

(24)

Income before taxes

$         886

$       1,665

1

Amounts included in Other (income) expense.

2

Amounts included in Cost of products and services sold.

3

Amounts included in Selling, general and administrative expenses.

4

Amounts included in Cost of products and services sold (service cost component), Selling, general and administrative expenses (service cost component), Research and development expenses (service cost component), and Other (income) expense (non-service cost component).

5

Amounts included in Cost of products and services sold, Selling, general and administrative expenses, and Other (income) expense.

6

Includes repositioning, asbestos, and environmental gains (expenses).

7

Amounts included in Selling, general and administrative expenses and Other (income) expense.

8

Amounts include the other components of Selling, general and administrative expenses and Other (income) expense not included within other categories in this reconciliation. Equity income of affiliated companies is included in segment profit. 

 

Honeywell International Inc.

Consolidated Balance Sheet (Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions)

 

March 31, 2026

December 31, 2025

ASSETS

Current assets

Cash and cash equivalents

$             11,977

$             12,487

Short-term investments

413

443

Accounts receivable, less allowances of $165 and $202, respectively

8,062

7,621

Inventories

6,369

6,162

Assets held for sale

2,377

2,492

Other current assets

1,392

1,182

Total current assets

30,590

30,387

Investments and long-term receivables

1,414

1,404

Property, plant and equipment—net

4,664

4,629

Goodwill

21,079

21,079

Other intangible assets—net

6,562

6,736

Deferred income taxes

199

199

Other assets

9,480

9,247

Total assets

$             73,988

$             73,681

LIABILITIES

Current liabilities

Accounts payable

$              6,026

$              6,315

Commercial paper and other short-term borrowings

4,630

5,893

Current maturities of long-term debt

3,099

1,546

Accrued liabilities

7,112

8,462

Liabilities held for sale

1,218

1,198

Total current liabilities

22,085

23,414

Long-term debt

29,010

27,141

Deferred income taxes

1,581

1,577

Postretirement benefit obligations other than pensions

108

111

Other liabilities

6,537

6,408

Shareowners’ equity

14,667

15,030

Total liabilities and shareowners’ equity

$             73,988

$             73,681

 

Honeywell International Inc.

Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows (Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions)

 

Three Months Ended
March 31,

2026

2025

Cash flows from operating activities

Net income

$     795

$   1,467

Less: Net income from discontinued operations

171

Net income from continuing operations

795

1,296

Adjustments to reconcile net income from continuing operations to net cash (used for) provided by operating activities

Depreciation

134

126

Amortization

223

199

Gain on sale of non-strategic businesses and assets

(6)

(1)

Impairment of assets held for sale

263

15

Loss on debt extinguishment

239

Repositioning and other charges

68

43

Net payments for repositioning and other charges

(63)

(104)

Pension and other postretirement income

(167)

(144)

Pension and other postretirement benefit payments

(5)

(5)

Stock compensation expense

57

59

Deferred income taxes

(117)

(19)

Other

33

(221)

Changes in assets and liabilities, net of the effects of acquisitions and divestitures:

Accounts receivable

(447)

(424)

Inventories

(203)

(147)

Other current assets

(135)

29

Accounts payable

(289)

(132)

Accrued liabilities

(825)

(142)

Income taxes

(205)

(50)

Net cash (used for) provided by operating activities from continuing operations

(650)

378

Net cash provided by operating activities from discontinued operations

219

Net cash (used for) provided by operating activities

(650)

597

Cash flows from investing activities

Capital expenditures

(223)

(190)

Increase in investments

(194)

(351)

Decrease in investments

212

338

Receipts (payments) from settlements of derivative contracts

85

(125)

Cash paid for acquisitions, net of cash acquired

(5)

(5)

Proceeds from sale of business, net of cash transferred

6

Net cash used for investing activities from continuing operations

(119)

(333)

Net cash used for investing activities from discontinued operations

(38)

Net cash used for investing activities

(119)

(371)

Cash flows from financing activities

Proceeds from issuance of commercial paper and other short-term borrowings

4,758

4,855

Payments of commercial paper and other short-term borrowings

(6,018)

(3,413)

Proceeds from issuance of common stock

170

42

Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt

46

Payments of long-term debt

(12,605)

(44)

Repurchases of common stock

(1,000)

(1,902)

Cash dividends paid

(781)

(732)

Pre-separation funding

15,835

Other

(92)

(32)

Net cash provided by (used for) financing activities

267

(1,180)

Effect of foreign exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

(8)

44

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents

(510)

(910)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period

12,487

10,567

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

$ 11,977

$   9,657

Appendix

Non-GAAP Financial Measures

The following information provides definitions and reconciliations of certain non-GAAP financial measures presented in this press release to which this reconciliation is attached to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated and presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).

Management believes that, when considered together with reported amounts, these measures are useful to investors and management in understanding our ongoing operations and in the analysis of ongoing operating trends. These measures should be considered in addition to, and not as replacements for, the most comparable GAAP measure. Certain measures presented on a non-GAAP basis represent the impact of adjusting items net of tax. The tax-effect for adjusting items is determined individually and on a case-by-case basis. Other companies may calculate these non-GAAP measures differently, limiting the usefulness of these measures for comparative purposes.

Management does not consider these non-GAAP measures in isolation or as an alternative to financial measures determined in accordance with GAAP. The principal limitations of these non-GAAP financial measures are that they exclude significant expenses and income that are required by GAAP to be recognized in the consolidated financial statements. In addition, they are subject to inherent limitations as they reflect the exercise of judgments by management about which expenses and income are excluded or included in determining these non-GAAP financial measures. Investors are urged to review the reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures to the comparable GAAP financial measures and not to rely on any single financial measure to evaluate Honeywell’s business.

As indicated herein, certain forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures are not reconciled because management cannot reliably predict or estimate certain items for the reasons specified herein with respect to each non-GAAP financial measure.

 

Honeywell International Inc.

Reconciliation of Organic Sales Percent Change

(Unaudited)

 

Three Months Ended
March 31, 2026

Honeywell

Reported sales percent change

2 %

Less: Impact of divestitures to the prior period

(3) %

Reported sales percent change, adjusted for impact of divestitures

5 %

Less: Foreign currency translation

2 %

Less: Acquisitions

1 %

Less: Other

— %

Organic sales percent change

2 %

Aerospace Technologies

Reported sales percent change

4 %

Less: Impact of divestitures to the prior period

— %

Reported sales percent change, adjusted for impact of divestitures

4 %

Less: Foreign currency translation

1 %

Less: Acquisitions

— %

Less: Other

— %

Organic sales percent change

3 %

Building Automation

Reported sales percent change

11 %

Less: Impact of divestitures to the prior period

— %

Reported sales percent change, adjusted for impact of divestitures

11 %

Less: Foreign currency translation

3 %

Less: Acquisitions

— %

Less: Other

— %

Organic sales percent change

8 %

Process Automation and Technology

Reported sales percent change

5 %

Less: Impact of divestitures to the prior period

— %

Reported sales percent change, adjusted for impact of divestitures

5 %

Less: Foreign currency translation

2 %

Less: Acquisitions

9 %

Less: Other

— %

Organic sales percent change

(6) %

Industrial Automation

Reported sales percent change

(11) %

Less: Impact of divestitures to the prior period

(15) %

Reported sales percent change, adjusted for impact of divestitures

4 %

Less: Foreign currency translation

3 %

Less: Acquisitions

— %

Less: Other

— %

Organic sales percent change

1 %

We define organic sales percentage as the year-over-year change in reported sales relative to the comparable period, adjusted for the impact of divestitures to the prior period, and excluding the impact on sales from foreign currency translation, acquisitions for the first 12 months following the transaction date, and certain other items that are unusual or non-recurring in nature. We believe this measure is useful to investors and management in understanding our ongoing operations and in analysis of ongoing operating trends.

A quantitative reconciliation of reported sales percent change to organic sales percent change has not been provided for the forward-looking measure of organic sales percent change because management cannot reliably predict or estimate, without unreasonable effort, the fluctuations in global currency markets that impact foreign currency translation, nor is it reasonable for management to predict the timing, occurrence and impact of acquisition and divestiture transactions, all of which could significantly impact our reported sales percent change.

Honeywell International Inc.

Reconciliation of Net Sales to Adjusted Net Sales

 (Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions)

 

Twelve Months Ended
December 31, 2025

Honeywell

Net sales

$                37,442

Flexjet-related litigation matters1

312

Adjusted net sales

$                37,754

1

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, reflects a $312 million impact to sales due to contra revenue accounting as a result of the settlement of the Flexjet-related litigation matters.

We define adjusted net sales as net sales less the sales impact of the Flexjet-related litigation matters. Management  considers the nature and significance of these litigation matters to be unusual and not indicative of the Company’s ongoing performance. We believe this measure is useful to investors and management in understanding our ongoing operations and in analysis of ongoing operating trends.

Honeywell International Inc.

Reconciliation of Operating Income to Segment Profit and Adjusted Segment Profit,
Calculation of Operating Income, Segment Profit, and Adjusted Segment Profit Margins

 (Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions)

Three Months Ended March 31,

Twelve Months
Ended 
December 31,

2026

2025

2025

Operating income

$        1,474

$        1,721

$        5,573

Stock compensation expense1

57

59

196

Repositioning, Other2,3

84

59

675

Pension and other postretirement service costs4

17

13

73

Amortization of acquisition-related intangibles5

153

135

570

Acquisition-related costs6

2

Divestiture-related costs1

75

ERP implementation costs1

6

Indefinite-lived intangible asset impairment1

44

Impairment of goodwill

724

Impairment of assets held for sale

263

15

270

Segment profit

$        2,129

$        2,002

$        8,127

Flexjet-related litigation matters7

373

Adjusted segment profit

$        2,129

$        2,002

$        8,500

Operating income

$        1,474

$        1,721

$        5,573

÷ Net sales

9,143

8,925

37,442

Operating income margin %

16.1 %

19.3 %

14.9 %

Segment profit

$        2,129

$        2,002

$        8,127

÷ Net sales

9,143

8,925

37,442

Segment profit margin %

23.3 %

22.4 %

21.7 %

Adjusted segment profit

$        2,129

$        2,002

$        8,500

÷ Adjusted net sales

9,143

8,925

37,754

Adjusted segment profit margin %

23.3 %

22.4 %

22.5 %

1

Included in Selling, general and administrative expenses.

2

Includes repositioning, asbestos, environmental expenses, equity income adjustment, and other charges.

3

Included in Cost of products and services sold and Selling, general and administrative expenses.

4

Included in Cost of products and services sold, Research and development expenses, and Selling, general and administrative expenses.

5

Included in Cost of products and services sold.

6

Included in Cost of products and services sold. Includes acquisition-related fair value adjustments to inventory.

7

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, reflects a $373 million impact to segment profit as a result of the settlement of the Flexjet-related litigation matters.

We define operating income as net sales less total cost of products and services sold, research and development expenses, selling, general and administrative expenses, impairment of goodwill, and impairment of assets held for sale. We define segment profit, on an overall Honeywell basis, as operating income, excluding stock compensation expense, pension and other postretirement service costs, amortization of acquisition-related intangibles, certain acquisition- and divestiture-related costs and impairments, and repositioning and other charges. We define adjusted segment profit, on an overall Honeywell basis, as segment profit excluding the segment profit impact of the Flexjet-related litigation matters. We define segment profit margin, on an overall Honeywell basis, as segment profit divided by net sales. We define adjusted segment profit margin, on an overall Honeywell basis, as adjusted segment profit divided by adjusted net sales. We believe these measures are useful to investors and management in understanding our ongoing operations and in analysis of ongoing operating trends.

A quantitative reconciliation of operating income to segment profit, on an overall Honeywell basis, has not been provided for all forward-looking measures of segment profit and segment profit margin included herein. Management cannot reliably predict or estimate, without unreasonable effort, the impact and timing on future operating results arising from items excluded from segment profit, particularly pension mark-to-market expense as it is dependent on macroeconomic factors, such as interest rates and the return generated on invested pension plan assets. The information that is unavailable to provide a quantitative reconciliation could have a significant impact on our reported financial results. To the extent quantitative information becomes available without unreasonable effort in the future, and closer to the period to which the forward-looking measures pertain, a reconciliation of operating income to segment profit will be included within future filings.

Acquisition amortization and acquisition- and divestiture-related costs are significantly impacted by the timing, size, and number of acquisitions or divestitures we complete and are not on a predictable cycle and we make no comment as to when or whether any future acquisitions or divestitures may occur. We believe excluding these costs provides investors with a more meaningful comparison of operating performance over time and with both acquisitive and other peer companies.

Honeywell International Inc.

Reconciliation of Earnings per Share to Adjusted Earnings per Share

(Unaudited)

 

Three Months Ended
March 31,

Twelve Months Ended
December 31,

2026

2025

2025

2026(E)

Earnings per share of common stock from continuing operations – diluted1

$      1.29

$      1.97

$      6.94

$8.88 – $9.18

Pension mark-to-market expense2

0.02

0.19

No Forecast

Amortization of acquisition-related intangibles3

0.19

0.15

0.67

0.75

Acquisition-related costs4

0.01

0.05

0.05

Divestiture-related costs5

0.31

0.04

0.72

No Forecast

Debt restructuring costs6

0.35

0.35

ERP implementation costs7

0.01

0.02

Impairment of assets held for sale8

0.31

0.02

0.32

0.31

Indefinite-lived intangible asset impairment9

0.07

Impairment of goodwill10

1.13

(Gain) loss on sale of business11

(0.01)

0.04

(0.01)

Gain related to Resideo indemnification and reimbursement agreement termination12

(1.25)

Adjustment to estimated future environmental liabilities13

0.25

Loss on settlement of divestiture of asbestos liabilities14

0.17

Flexjet-related litigation matters15

0.48

Adjusted earnings per share of common stock from continuing operations – diluted

$      2.45

$      2.21

$      9.78

$10.35 – $10.65

1

For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, adjusted earnings per share utilizes weighted average shares of 638.4 million and 651.7 million, respectively. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, adjusted earnings per share utilizes weighted average shares of 642.8 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, expected earnings per share utilizes weighted average shares of approximately 639 million.

2

For the three months ended March 31, 2025, pension mark-to-market expense was $10 million, net of tax benefit of $4 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, pension mark-to-market was $123 million, net of tax benefit of $40 million.

3

For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, acquisition-related intangibles amortization includes $117 million and $102 million, net of tax benefit of $36 million and $33 million, respectively. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, acquisition-related intangibles amortization includes $432 million, net of tax benefit of $138 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, the expected adjustment for acquisition-related intangibles amortization includes approximately $480 million, net of tax benefit of approximately $115 million.

4

For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, the adjustment for acquisition-related costs, which is principally comprised of third-party transaction and integration costs was $2 million, net of tax benefit of $1 million, and $6 million, net of tax benefit of $2 million, respectively. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the adjustment for acquisition-related costs, which is principally comprised of third-party transaction and integration costs and acquisition-related fair value adjustments to inventory, was $35 million, net of tax benefit of $10 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, the expected adjustment for acquisition-related costs, which is principally comprised of third-party transaction and integration costs, is approximately $35 million, net of tax benefit of approximately $10 million.

5

For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, the adjustment for divestiture-related costs, which is principally comprised of third-party transaction and separation costs, was $204 million and $23 million, net of tax benefit of $149 million and tax expense of $12 million, respectively. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the adjustment for divestiture-related costs, which is principally comprised of third-party transaction costs, was $460 million, net of tax benefit of $61 million.

6

For the three months ended March 31, 2026, the adjustment for debt restructuring costs was $226 million, net of tax benefit of $70 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, the expected adjustment for debt restructuring costs is $226 million, net of tax benefit of $70 million.

7

For the three months ended March 31, 2026, the adjustment for ERP implementation costs was $5 million, net of tax benefit of $1 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, the expected adjustment for ERP implementation costs is approximately $15 million, net of tax benefit of approximately $5 million.

8

For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, the impairment charge of assets held for sale was $200 million, net of tax benefit of $63 million, and $15 million, without tax benefit, respectively. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the impairment charge of assets held for sale was $209 million, net of tax benefit of $61 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, the expected impairment charge of assets held for sale is $200 million, net of tax benefit of $63 million.

9

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the impairment charge of indefinite-lived intangible assets associated with the Industrial Automation reportable segment was $44 million, without tax benefit.

10

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the impairment charge of goodwill associated with the Industrial Automation reportable segment was $724 million, without tax benefit.

11

For the three months ended March 31, 2026, the gain on sale of personal protection equipment business was $5 million, net of tax expense of $1 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the adjustment for loss on sale of the personal protective equipment business was $28 million, net of tax benefit of $2 million. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2026, the expected gain on sale of personal protection equipment business is $5 million, net of tax expense of $1 million.

12

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the gain related to the Resideo indemnification and reimbursement agreement termination was $802 million, without tax expense.

13

In the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the Company enhanced its process for estimating environmental liabilities at sites undergoing active remediation, which led to earlier recognition of the estimated probable liabilities and an increase to estimated environmental liabilities. For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the adjustment to increase environmental liabilities was $161 million, net of tax benefit of $50 million.

14

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the adjustment for loss on settlement of divestiture of asbestos liabilities was $112 million, net of tax benefit of $36 million.

15

For the twelve months ended December 31, 2025, the adjustment for the Flexjet-related litigation matters was $302 million, net of tax benefit of $71 million. Management considers the nature and significance of these litigation matters to be unusual and not indicative of the Company’s ongoing performance.

We define adjusted earnings per share as diluted earnings per share from continuing operations adjusted to exclude various charges as listed above. We believe adjusted earnings per share is a measure that is useful to investors and management in understanding our ongoing operations and in analysis of ongoing operating trends. For forward-looking information, management cannot reliably predict or estimate, without unreasonable effort, the pension mark-to-market expense or the divestiture-related costs. The pension mark-to-market expense is dependent on macroeconomic factors, such as interest rates and the return generated on invested pension plan assets. The divestiture-related costs are subject to detailed development and execution of separation restructuring plans for the announced separation of Honeywell from Honeywell Aerospace. We therefore do not include an estimate for the pension mark-to-market expense or divestiture-related costs. Based on economic and industry conditions, future developments, and other relevant factors, these assumptions are subject to change.

Acquisition amortization and acquisition- and divestiture-related costs are significantly impacted by the timing, size, and number of acquisitions or divestitures we complete and are not on a predictable cycle and we make no comment as to when or whether any future acquisitions or divestitures may occur. We believe excluding these costs provides investors with a more meaningful comparison of operating performance over time and with both acquisitive and other peer companies.

Honeywell International Inc.

Reconciliation of Cash Provided by Operating Activities to Free Cash Flow

(Unaudited)

(Dollars in millions)

 

Three Months
Ended
March 31, 2026

Three Months
Ended
March 31, 2025

Twelve Months
Ended
December 31, 2025

Cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations

$           (650)

$            378

$          6,075

Capital expenditures

(223)

(190)

(986)

Spin-off and separation-related cost payments

552

3

116

Resideo indemnification and reimbursement agreement termination payment

(1,590)

Settlement of divestiture of asbestos liabilities

1,428

Settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters

377

59

Free cash flow

$             56

$            191

$          5,102

We define free cash flow as cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations less cash for capital expenditures and excluding spin-off and separation-related cost payments, the Resideo indemnification and reimbursement agreement termination payment, cash payment for settlement of divestiture of asbestos liabilities, and the cash payment for settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters.

We believe that free cash flow is a non-GAAP measure that is useful to investors and management as a measure of cash generated by operations that will be used to repay scheduled debt maturities and can be used to invest in future growth through new business development activities or acquisitions, pay dividends, repurchase stock, or repay debt obligations prior to their maturities. This measure can also be used to evaluate our ability to generate cash flow from operations and the impact that this cash flow has on our liquidity.

Honeywell International Inc.

Reconciliation of Expected Cash Provided by Operating Activities to Expected Free Cash Flow

(Unaudited)

(Dollars in billions)

 

Twelve Months Ended
December 31, 2026(E)

Cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations

~$4.4 – $4.7

Capital expenditures

~(1.3)

Spin-off and separation-related cost payments

~1.8

Settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters

~0.4

Free cash flow

~$5.3 – $5.6

We define free cash flow as cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations less cash for capital expenditures and excluding spin-off and separation-related cost payments, the Resideo indemnification and reimbursement agreement termination payment, the cash payment for settlement of divestiture of asbestos liabilities, and the cash payment for settlement of Flexjet-related litigation matters.

We believe that free cash flow is a non-GAAP measure that is useful to investors and management as a measure of cash generated by operations that will be used to repay scheduled debt maturities and can be used to invest in future growth through new business development activities or acquisitions, pay dividends, repurchase stock, or repay debt obligations prior to their maturities. This measure can also be used to evaluate our ability to generate cash flow from operations and the impact that this cash flow has on our liquidity.

Contacts:

Media

Investor Relations

Stacey Jones

Mark Macaluso

(980) 378-6258

(704) 627-6118

stacey.jones@honeywell.com

mark.macaluso@honeywell.com

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SOURCE Honeywell

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Technology

Robinson Nuclear Plant receives approval from U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to continue operating until 2050

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License extension supports growing energy demand, helps keep customer costs as low as possibleExtended operation provides significant economic benefits for Pee Dee region

Editor’s note: Visit the Duke Energy News Center for downloadable B-roll and high-resolution images of Robinson Nuclear Plant.

CHARLOTTE, N.C., April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has renewed the operating license for Duke Energy’s Robinson Nuclear Plant for an additional 20 years, extending the plant’s ability to deliver reliable energy until 2050.

Robinson, located in Hartsville, S.C., provides enough energy to power 570,000 homes and plays an important role in protecting reliability and affordability for customers as regional electricity demand continues to grow.

What they’re saying

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster: “South Carolina’s energy needs continue to rise, and extending Robinson Nuclear Plant’s operating license preserves a reliable, affordable source of nuclear energy our state depends on. This plant ensures we have the power needed to support jobs and strengthen communities across the Pee Dee region.”Congressman Russell Fry (SC-07): “For 50 years, Robinson Nuclear Plant has been the backbone of South Carolina’s nuclear fleet. The extension of its license is monumental for the Pee Dee and allows Duke Energy to continue providing affordable, reliable electricity to homes and businesses in the region. This renewal is a win for families in the Pee Dee, Robinson Nuclear Plant’s employees and Darlington County as a whole.”Steven Capps, chief nuclear officer for Duke Energy: “Extending the operating life of this proven asset helps us deliver low-cost, always-on electricity for customers while supporting jobs and energy security for the region. Robinson’s subsequent license renewal reflects the strength of our safety culture and the rigorous work our teams do every day to support our communities.”

Why it matters

Duke Energy’s nuclear fleet provides about 51% of customers’ energy needs in the Carolinas, making nuclear energy an essential component of the company’s diverse generation portfolio.License renewal extends the use of cost-effective generation, resulting in significant savings for customers over time.Extended operation sustains significant economic benefits for Darlington County and the broader Pee Dee region.

Robinson by the numbers

Delivers 759 megawatts (MW) of electricity, powering nearly 570,000 homes.Nearly 500 high-paying jobs supported.$1.7 billion in equipment upgrades completed.Approximately $28 million in annual local tax contributions.

Go deeper

U.S. nuclear facilities are licensed by the NRC. The process to renew a license requires a comprehensive analysis and evaluation to ensure the plant can safely be operated for the period of extended operation.Robinson’s original 40-year operating license was granted by the NRC in 1970, making it one of the first commercial nuclear power plants in the Southeast. Robinson’s initial license was renewed for an additional 20 years of operation until 2030, and the subsequent license renewal allows for continued operations until 2050.Robinson is the second Duke Energy nuclear facility to receive approval for subsequent license renewal, following Oconee Nuclear Station in 2025. Duke Energy plans to seek subsequent license renewal for all 11 operating units across its nuclear fleet.For more background and updates on the subsequent license renewal process, visit Duke Energy’s subsequent license renewal webpage.

Duke Energy

Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK), a Fortune 150 company headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., is one of America’s largest energy holding companies. The company’s electric utilities serve 8.7 million customers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky, and collectively own 55,700 megawatts of energy capacity. Its natural gas utilities serve 1.6 million customers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Ohio and Kentucky.

Duke Energy is executing an energy modernization strategy, keeping customer value at the forefront as it invests in electric grid upgrades and efficient generation resources to strengthen the system and serve growing energy needs.

More information is available at duke-energy.com. Follow Duke Energy on X, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok and Facebook for stories about the people and innovations powering its communities.

Contact: Mikayla Kreuzberger
24-Hour: 800.559.3853

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/robinson-nuclear-plant-receives-approval-from-us-nuclear-regulatory-commission-to-continue-operating-until-2050-302752297.html

SOURCE Duke Energy

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Cin7 Appoints Sheldon Cummings as Chief Executive Officer

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Seasoned SMB technology leader joins to drive AI-powered growth for inventory and commerce platform

DENVER, April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — Cin7, a leading inventory management and connected commerce platform for small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs), today announced the appointment of Sheldon Cummings as Chief Executive Officer, effective April 20th. Sheldon succeeds Ajoy Krishnamoorthy, who is stepping down after leading the company through a significant period of product investment, global expansion, and customer growth.

I’m thrilled to be joining Cin7 at such a defining moment for both the company and the future of commerce.

“Leading Cin7 over these past few years has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career,” said Ajoy. “I am proud of the work that we’ve done to improve the product, unite our global team, and deepen our connection with our customers. I’m confident that Sheldon is the right leader for Cin7’s next phase and I look forward to watching this team take the business to the next level.”

Sheldon brings more than 25 years of experience scaling technology businesses that serve small and mid-sized businesses. He most recently served as President and General Manager of the Corporate Business Unit at Smarsh. Prior to Smarsh, he served as Chief Operating Officer of Mailchimp, leading revenue, strategy, and operations across one of the world’s most widely used SaaS platforms for small businesses. He has also held senior leadership roles at Intuit, including Vice President of Sales, where he contributed to scaling go-to-market engines for SMB and Mid-Market focused products.

Sheldon joins Cin7 at a pivotal moment as AI reshapes how businesses manage inventory, fulfill orders, and connect their commerce operations. Already deeply invested in AI, Cin7 is positioned to lead the transformation by delivering smarter, faster, and more connected capabilities to its customers around the world.

“I am thrilled to be joining Cin7 at such a defining moment,” said Sheldon Cummings. “Cin7 has built something genuinely valuable. It has real product depth, a passionate global team, and a large market still full of opportunity. There is a compelling opportunity to become the intelligent commerce platform for SMB and Mid-Market product sellers across the globe. To be the one that harnesses the power of AI to help businesses operate better and grow faster. I am excited to partner with this team to chase that opportunity and to continue delivering the innovation our customers deserve.”

Cin7 serves thousands of businesses worldwide, helping them manage inventory, streamline operations, and connect their sales channels through a single, powerful platform. With teams in the United States, United Kingdom, New Zealand, Australia, Sri Lanka, the United Arab Emirates, India, and the Czech Republic, Cin7 operates as a truly global business with a local commitment to every market it serves.

About Cin7

Cin7 is the leading inventory management and connected commerce platform for small and mid-sized product businesses. Cin7 helps growing brands manage inventory, automate workflows, and connect their sales channels, from e-commerce to wholesale to retail, in one powerful, easy-to-use platform. With over 8,500+ customers in over 100 countries processing over 125 million orders annually, Cin7 is a global business on a mission to make commerce simpler, smarter, and more connected for product sellers everywhere. For more information, visit www.cin7.com.

Media Contact

Karla Fleege, Cin7, 1 509-413-0025, pr@cin7.com, www.cin7.com

View original content:https://www.prweb.com/releases/cin7-appoints-sheldon-cummings-as-chief-executive-officer-302752187.html

SOURCE Cin7

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ShareRing, TKC and Transformational Launch Thailand’s First National Trust Infrastructure for Verifiable Credentials, with Production Rollout Starting June 2026

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A three-party alliance between ShareRing, publicly listed digital infrastructure provider TKC, and Thailand digital transformation firm Transformational will deliver the country’s first integrated Verifiable Credential and Digital Document Wallet infrastructure, anchored on ShareRing’s Privacy KYC technology.

BANGKOK, April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — Turnkey Communication Services PCL (TKC), in partnership with Transformational and ShareRing, today announced a strategic alliance to launch Thailand’s first integrated Verifiable Credential and Digital Document Wallet infrastructure, bridging the trust gap between government and private sector transactions.

We are building the trust layer that the whole country runs on.

“This partnership is about establishing a ‘National Trust Infrastructure,’ which is a critical national policy direction,” said Mr. Sayam Tiewtranon, CEO of TKC. “TKC’s role is to merge our existing infrastructure with global technology standards to drive widespread adoption in alignment with MDES and ETDA. We aim to reduce costs and increase transparency without burdening existing systems, while ensuring future international connectivity.”

Thailand’s Digital Paradox: Connectivity vs. Physical Friction

Despite a 95 percent internet penetration rate, the transactions that matter most, proving where you live, verifying a professional qualification, or applying for a loan, still require a physical visit and photocopies. “In 2026, citizens are still taking half-days off work to manage paperwork at service counters that close at 3 PM,” said Khun Ariya Banomyong, CEO of Transformational, and former Country Head of Google Thailand and Managing Director of LINE Thailand. “What Thailand lacks is a shared infrastructure layer connecting verified documents to real transactions.”

The High Cost of Unverifiable Documents

Reliance on paper documents leaves citizens and businesses vulnerable. “Paper documents are the ‘weakest link’ in the trust chain; easy to forge and impossible to verify,” Mr. Ariya added. “Once data is on paper, you lose control. For businesses, scanned affidavits prove nothing without independent verification, exposing them to massive risks, from unauthorized directorship changes to fraudulent contracts. Nationally, the cost is measured in hundreds of billions of baht in untraceable educational loan portfolios and public services.”

The Solution: Digital Document Wallet plus Verifiable Credential

The alliance introduces a Digital Document Wallet infrastructure, acting as a “Digital Twin” for critical documentation. Powered by ShareRing’s blockchain technology, already deployed in multiple international markets, the platform supports a wide array of Verifiable Credentials. It is designed to accommodate professional licences, employment certifications, company affidavits, academic transcripts and other identity documents as they transition into the ecosystem.

A Three-Party Architecture

The alliance is designed around three complementary roles. TKC provides the national infrastructure footprint and institutional reach into Thai state-owned enterprises. Transformational leads enterprise and government delivery, translating national policy direction into operational rollout. ShareRing contributes the production Privacy KYC technology stack, already live in multiple international markets. ShareRing also holds a strategic equity stake in Transformational, aligning commercial incentives across delivery and technology beyond a standard vendor relationship.

What Institutions Actually Buy: Sovereign Issuance

The commercial offering at the core of the alliance is what ShareRing calls Sovereign Issuance. A government agency, university, regulator or large enterprise issues its own verifiable digital documents, from its own infrastructure, under its own seal. The end user holds the document on a personal device, gives explicit consent before anything is shared, and reveals only what the verifier requires through Zero-Knowledge Proofs. Verification happens in real time, cryptographically, without the verifier ever needing to contact the issuer. Trust stays with the real authority, the issuer, rather than with a centralised intermediary.

Compliant with Global Security Standards (Private and Secure by Design)

The platform is built on privacy-first global standards, with User Consent at its core. It is W3C Verifiable Credential compliant, DIATF certified and ISO 27001:2022 accredited, and aligned with GDPR, Thailand’s PDPA and the Australian Privacy Act. Implementation is being tracked against the emerging OpenID for Verifiable Credentials (OID4VC) interoperability layer being shaped by ETDA.

“By utilizing Zero-Knowledge Proof (ZKP) and Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI), we ensure users verify information without exposing sensitive data,” said Mr. Tim Bos, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of ShareRing. “No information is accessed without explicit user consent, ensuring only the owner holds the access keys to their digital identity.”

From Policy to Implementation

The alliance focuses on providing enterprise-ready solutions to bridge the gap between policy and execution:

Seamless connectivity via SDKs and APIs for immediate integration into existing legacy systems.Sovereign issuance infrastructure enabling organisations to securely issue their own verifiable digital documents.Real-time verification to eliminate manual delays and fraudulent documentation risks.

“We are building the trust layer that the whole country runs on,” said Mr. Rohan Le Page, Founder and Co-CEO of ShareRing. “By deploying W3C-compliant and ISO-accredited technology, we are providing Thailand with an infrastructure built for global interoperability and international business expansion.”

Implementation Roadmap

“We are already in execution,” said Mr. Piya Jirapapongsa, Deputy Managing Director (Operations) at TKC. “Our first deployment goes live with a major state-owned enterprise in June 2026, followed by digital credential issuance for a network of Thai universities in August 2026, with active discussions underway across financial services, hospitality, and public administration.”

A Blueprint for the Region

Thailand is the first national-scale deployment of the alliance’s model. The partners intend the same architecture, a national infrastructure anchor, a locally credible delivery partner, and a W3C compliant identity and credential stack, to serve as a template for broader South East Asian rollout, with regional conversations already active.

For further project enquiries, please contact Mr. Ekkapol Promratanapong, Digital Product Director, TKC, who leads this initiative.

About Turnkey Communication Services PCL (TKC)

TKC is Thailand’s full-service digital infrastructure provider, covering telecommunications, cybersecurity, and digital solutions for government and large enterprises. Led by CEO Sayam Tiewtranon, the company focuses on building infrastructure that is resilient, secure, and compatible with international standards, supporting the country’s transition to a digital economy.

About Transformational Co., Ltd.

Digital transformation consultancy, working with corporate clients and state-owned enterprises, specialising in digital document trust infrastructure and verifiable credential solutions. Led by CEO Ariya Banomyong.

About ShareRing

ShareRing is a Privacy KYC and Verifiable Credential platform operating across multiple international markets. W3C Verifiable Credential compliant, DIATF certified, and ISO 27001:2022 accredited, ShareRing’s infrastructure is built for institutional scale. The company operates ShareLedger, a Cosmos-based Layer 1 calibrated for identity workloads, and ships the ShareRing Me consumer wallet and ShareRing Link enterprise SDK. ShareRing holds a strategic equity stake in Transformational Co., Ltd.

Media Contact

Rohan Le Page, ShareRing, 61 438094075, marketing@sharering.network, https://www.sharering.network

View original content:https://www.prweb.com/releases/sharering-tkc-and-transformational-launch-thailands-first-national-trust-infrastructure-for-verifiable-credentials-with-production-rollout-starting-june-2026-302752315.html

SOURCE ShareRing

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