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Honeywell eyes supplier shift to avoid tariff hit

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NEW YORK: US industrial conglomerate Honeywell International Inc said it had started sourcing some of its components from countries other than China to counter growing costs related to a tariff war between the world’s two largest economies.


Honeywell’s shares rose as much as 4.4 per cent to $153.99 after the company also reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit and raised its 2018 profit forecast for the third time as it benefits from increased demand for aircraft parts and services.


The conglomerate said it had boosted prices on some of its products and had locked in purchases of some raw materials and components before new tariffs on imports from China came into effect.


“The key here is to get ahead of it early, and I think we definitely have,” Chief Executive Darius Adamczyk told a conference call with analysts after the company’s second quarter results. “If you sit and wait, you could see substantial margin contraction.”


The maker of engines for business jets produced by Bombardier and Textron raised the low end of its full-year margin forecast to 19.4-19.6 per cent from 19.3-19.6 per cent, and said it was expecting limited impact from known tariffs due to its mitigating actions.


Honeywell and other industrial firms are seeing costs rising after President Donald Trump imposed a 25 per cent tariff on imports of steel and 10 per cent on aluminium from China and other countries.


“I wouldn’t tell you we’re not impacted, but we’re a lot more prepared,” Adamczyk said.


Excluding items, Honeywell earned $2.12 per share in the second quarter ended June 30, beating analysts’ average estimate of $2.01, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.


The company’s revenue rose 8.3 per cent to $10.92 billion, above a Wall Street estimate of $10.80 billion.


An e-commerce boom in the United States is also contributing to Honeywell’s profits, helping it sell more supply chain and warehouse automation equipment and software to customers including Amazon.com Inc.


Sales in the aerospace division, which makes auxiliary power units, braking systems and other parts for Boeing and Airbus single-aisle planes, rose about 10 per cent to $4.06 billion.


The company now expects 2018 profit in a range of $8.05-$8.15 per share, up from $7.85-$8.05, and sales of $43.1 billion-$43.6 billion, up from $42.7 billion-$43.5 billion. — Reuters


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