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RTX Corporation (RTX) - Stock Report

Recherche informative — ne constitue pas un conseil en investissement.Avertissement complet

Recherche informative — ne constitue pas un conseil en investissement. Générée en partie par IA et peut contenir des erreurs ; ce n'est pas une recommandation personnalisée, une sollicitation ni une offre. ReasyPort n'est pas une entreprise d'investissement agréée ou réglementée. Les données de marché peuvent être différées ou inexactes. Le capital est à risque et les performances passées ne préjugent pas des résultats futurs — faites vos propres recherches et consultez un conseiller agréé.

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RTX

RTX Corporation

ReasyPort View: Too Demanding — GTF Cash Conversion Proof Required

Summary

RTX is a high-quality aerospace and defense backlog-conversion franchise, not a weak-business case: Collins turns installed aircraft systems into aftermarket parts and repair cash, Pratt & Whitney owns long-duration engine service economics but still carries the GTF Powder Metal burden, and Raytheon converts missile-defense, sensors and classified demand into defense program profit. The issue is price discipline. At the $185.60 market snapshot from the 18 June 2026 close, the stock trades 32% above the selected fair value of $140.43 and only about 4% below the $192.68 upside marker.

Latest Proof Snapshot

Q1 2026 (reported 21 April 2026) is the freshest investment evidence, and it reads as a strong-demand quarter that should not be annualized. Reported diluted EPS rose 32% year over year to $1.51 and adjusted diluted EPS rose 21% to $1.78, helped in part by an easy prior-year comparison; company-reported free cash flow rose 65% to $1.309 bn after $546 mn of capex, though that is a figure. Backlog climbed to $271 bn from $268 bn at year-end 2025 despite $22.076 bn of sales, with defense bookings near $14 bn versus about $9 bn a year earlier, so book-to-bill ran modestly above 1. Segment execution was broad: Collins posted $7.602 bn of sales at a 17.2% reported operating margin, Pratt $8.173 bn at 8.7%, and Raytheon $6.945 bn at 12.1%. The valuation question is whether this order-and-revenue strength becomes recurring post-capex cash, not whether a single quarter looked good.

Market Snapshot

The key macro issue is not stronger aerospace demand in isolation, but whether higher flight hours and defense orders pass through Collins, Pratt and Raytheon into post-capex free cash flow after GTF remediation, working capital and program-cost resets. The investment decision is therefore specific: investors are paying for backlog, aftermarket pull-through and Pratt normalization to become cash fast enough to justify a higher DCF anchor. Q1 2026 evidence was constructive on demand — organic sales rose 10% and backlog reached $271 bn — but it does not yet prove that GTF shop-visit capacity, Raytheon program execution and working capital can support the current price.

Business Overview

What The Company Actually Does

RTX operates through Collins Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney, and Raytheon. The group is a hybrid commercial-aerospace systems supplier, aircraft-engine OEM and aftermarket platform, and defense prime/subcontractor; calling it simply a defense contractor misses the different cash engines inside the portfolio.

How The Business Is Organized

Collins provides aircraft systems, avionics, interiors, connected aviation, mission systems and aftermarket services. Its role is content per aircraft plus aftermarket pull-through: equipment deliveries can be lower-margin seeding activity, while spares, provisioning, parts and repairs carry the higher-quality service economics. Pratt & Whitney designs and services commercial and military engines, including the PW1000G Geared Turbofan and F135. Its role is long-duration engine service economics, but the value bridge is still burdened by GTF Powder Metal inspections, customer credits, shop visits and partner recoveries. Raytheon supplies integrated air and missile defense, sensors, effectors, space systems and classified capabilities. Its role is defense backlog conversion under FAR/DFARS, DCAA/DCMA, ITAR/export-control and program-estimate constraints.

What Management Appears To Be Prioritizing

Backlog is central but not self-validating. At 31 March 2026, RTX reported $271 bn of remaining performance obligations, with about 45% tied to long-term commercial aerospace maintenance contracts at Pratt that can run up to 20 years. That service backlog is the balance-sheet resilience that matters: if shop-visit economics and long-term service agreement assumptions hold, leverage is manageable; if cost-to-serve rises, cash flexibility narrows quickly.

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