Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Cincinnati OH jet engine technology (NYSE: GE) at $38.7B 2024 revenue; 44,000+ commercial engines in service, LEAP powers 737 MAX/A320neo via CFM JV, 26.2% operating margins competing with Pratt & Whitney and Rolls-Royce.
GE Aerospace is a Cincinnati, Ohio-based jet engine and aviation propulsion technology company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: GE) as an S&P 500 Industrials component — designing, manufacturing, and servicing commercial and military aircraft engines through approximately 52,000 employees serving commercial airlines, defense agencies, and regional operators in 170+ countries. GE Aerospace became a standalone publicly traded company in April 2024 when General Electric completed its multi-year strategic separation — spinning off GE Vernova (energy transition) separately and retaining the aerospace and defense engine business as the pure-play GE Aerospace entity. In full year 2024 (its first year as a standalone company), GE Aerospace reported revenue of $38.7 billion, operating profit growth of 25%, and operating margin expansion to 26.2% — with Q4 2024 orders up 46%, Q4 revenue of $10.8 billion (+14%), and free cash flow growth exceeding 20%. CEO Larry Culp has led GE Aerospace through the conglomerate separation, maintaining LEAP engine production ramp for the Boeing 737 MAX and Airbus A320neo in partnership with CFM International (GE's 50/50 joint venture with Safran). GE Aerospace's total installed commercial engine base exceeds 44,000 engines, with a services backlog exceeding $150 billion — creating decades of recurring maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) revenue.
Shelton CT electrical products and utility solutions (NYSE: HUBB) ~$5.6B FY2024 revenue (+4.8%); grid modernization transformers, data center power distribution, double-digit op profit growth competing with Eaton and ABB.
Hubbell Incorporated is a Shelton, Connecticut-based electrical products and utility solutions company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: HUBB) as an S&P 500 Industrials component — manufacturing and selling wiring devices, industrial electrical equipment, power systems, data center power distribution, and utility grid automation products through approximately 18,000 employees in manufacturing plants across the United States, Canada, and internationally. In fiscal year 2024, Hubbell reported full-year revenue of approximately $5.6 billion (+4.76% year-over-year), with double-digit growth in operating profit, earnings per share, and free cash flow — demonstrating the operational leverage of Hubbell's product mix as demand for electrical infrastructure (grid modernization, data center power distribution, EV charging) drove volume into Hubbell's higher-margin product lines. CEO Gerben Bakker has positioned Hubbell's two segments for distinct growth vectors: Hubbell Electrical Products (wiring devices, commercial and industrial electrical distribution components, residential and commercial electrical boxes and conduit) and Utility Solutions (electric utility transmission and distribution equipment — transformers, meters, grid automation relays, switches, and padmount transformers for underground distribution). The Utility Solutions segment's grid automation and transformer products benefit directly from grid modernization investment driven by state renewable portfolio standards, EV load integration requirements, and federal infrastructure funding through the Inflation Reduction Act grid resilience grants.
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