RTX First-Quarter Sales Rise Despite GTF Engine Delivery Pressure

RTX sales rose in 1Q, but Pratt & Whitney GTF engine delivery pressure continued to affect Airbus supply.
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RTX First-Quarter Sales Rise Despite GTF Engine Delivery Pressure
RTX

RTX first-quarter sales increased year on year despite lower commercial engine deliveries at Pratt & Whitney, showing the strength of aerospace aftermarket and defence demand. The US aerospace group reported sales of $22.1bn in January-March, up 9% from a year earlier.

RTX first-quarter sales were supported by stable commercial original equipment demand, strong aftermarket activity and higher defence demand. The company’s three major businesses — Collins Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney and Raytheon — all sit inside supply chains tied to aircraft production, engine maintenance and military systems.

RTX first-quarter sales also benefited from a record backlog of $271bn. This included $162bn in commercial contracts and $109bn in defence contracts, with Raytheon supported by higher bookings for Patriot guidance-enhanced missiles.

The result highlights a split inside the aerospace market. Aircraft and defence demand remain strong, but engine delivery constraints continue to slow the pace at which some commercial aircraft programmes can convert orderbooks into production.

Pratt & Whitney Engine Deliveries Remain a Key Airbus Constraint

Pratt & Whitney reported a 1% decline in commercial original equipment sales because of lower engine deliveries. The company produces the PW1100G geared turbofan engine for Airbus’ A320neo family, one of the world’s most important narrowbody aircraft programmes.

The shortfall matters because Airbus depends on engine supply to meet its build-rate targets. Pratt & Whitney has struggled to deliver enough engines, and Airbus has already had to adjust its production trajectory because of engine availability.

RTX said the challenge reflects the need to balance new aircraft demand with the health of the existing GTF fleet. The current engine variant has faced durability issues, creating pressure on both newbuild supply and aftermarket support.

The GTF fleet management plan remains central to Pratt & Whitney’s operating outlook. In 2023, RTX identified a rare condition in powder metal used to manufacture high-pressure turbine disks and high-pressure compressor disks. The issue requires accelerated inspections across the PW1100G-JM fleet.

This creates a complex supply-chain problem. Pratt & Whitney must supply engines for new aircraft while also managing inspections, repairs and parts availability for the installed fleet.

The result is an engine bottleneck that affects more than RTX. Airbus, airlines, leasing companies, MRO providers, forging suppliers, powder metal producers and high-temperature alloy producers all feel the impact.

Aftermarket Strength and MRO Investment Support Longer-Term Recovery

Aftermarket demand helped offset lower engine deliveries. RTX’s first-quarter performance shows that commercial aerospace earnings are increasingly supported by maintenance, repair and overhaul activity as global fleets remain active and engine shop visits rise.

Pratt & Whitney’s MRO output for the PW1100 increased by 23% from a year earlier. First-quarter shop visits were in line with the expected full-year run rate of about 800.

This aftermarket strength is strategically important. Engine problems can reduce new OE sales, but they also create higher demand for inspections, replacement parts, shop visits and repair capacity.

RTX is investing to expand that capacity. The company has made MRO investments in Singapore, plans to add a forging press at its Columbus, Georgia facility, and will install a new powder production tower at its HMI facility in New York.

These investments point directly to the materials side of aerospace. GTF recovery depends on reliable powder metallurgy, high-performance alloys, forged components, precision machining and certified repair capacity.

Defence demand adds another layer of support. Wars in the Middle East and Ukraine increased demand for defence systems, while Raytheon’s Patriot missile backlog strengthened RTX’s defence orderbook.

The industrial message is clear. RTX is benefiting from strong aerospace and defence markets, but the GTF engine issue shows that one material or component bottleneck can still constrain aircraft production.

The Metalnomist Commentary

RTX’s results show that aerospace demand remains strong, but production growth is still limited by engine and materials bottlenecks. Powder metallurgy, forging capacity and MRO infrastructure are now strategic parts of the aircraft supply chain, not just supporting processes.

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