Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Newport News VA nuclear shipbuilding (NYSE: HII) $11.1B FY2024 revenue; sole US aircraft carrier builder, Virginia/Columbia-class submarine partner, CVN-79 JFK delivery, AUKUS submarines competing with General Dynamics.
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. (HII) is a Newport News, Virginia-based defense shipbuilding and defense services company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: HII) as an S&P 500 Industrials component — building and maintaining nuclear-powered submarines (Virginia-class attack submarines, Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines) and surface ships (Gerald R. Ford-class nuclear aircraft carriers, America-class amphibious assault ships, Arleigh Burke-class destroyers) through its Newport News Shipbuilding and Ingalls Shipbuilding subsidiaries, and providing defense technology and services through the Mission Technologies segment, through approximately 44,000 employees. HII is the largest military shipbuilder in the United States and the sole builder of US Navy nuclear-powered aircraft carriers (Newport News Shipbuilding — Gerald R. Ford-class carriers, the USS Gerald R. Ford CVN-78 delivered 2017, USS John F. Kennedy CVN-79 under construction) and a partner with General Dynamics Electric Boat for Virginia-class nuclear submarine construction (Newport News builds the stern, propulsion systems, and integration; Electric Boat builds the bow and performs final integration at Groton CT). In fiscal year 2024, HII reported revenues of $11.1 billion (+5% year-over-year), with the Shipbuilding segment generating $8.6 billion and Mission Technologies (defense IT, analytics, C5ISR services) generating $2.5 billion. CEO Chris Kastner has focused on improving shipbuilding performance metrics (on-time delivery, ship quality scores, learning curve efficiency) as the Newport News Shipbuilding facilities executed multiple concurrent complex programs — CVN-79 John F. Kennedy carrier construction, CVN-80 Enterprise carrier material purchasing, Virginia-class Block V submarine sections — amid post-COVID skilled shipwright workforce shortages and supply chain disruptions.
Cambridge/Colorado trapped-ion quantum computing (Honeywell majority; $625M+/$5B valuation Jun 2024); Helios Nov 2025 at 98 physical/48 logical qubits with 99.9975% fidelity serving Amgen/BMW/JPMorgan competing with IBM Quantum.
Quantinuum is a Cambridge, UK and Broomfield, Colorado-based integrated quantum computing company — majority owned by Honeywell (NASDAQ: HON) with $625+ million in total funding including a $300 million round led by JPMorgan Chase at a $5 billion valuation in June 2024 — operating the world's most accurate commercial quantum computers using trapped-ion technology combined with quantum software from Cambridge Quantum. In November 2025, Quantinuum launched Helios, its third-generation quantum computer featuring 98 physical qubits and 48 logical error-corrected qubits with 99.9975% single-qubit gate fidelity and 99.921% two-qubit gate fidelity — the highest-accuracy general-purpose commercial quantum computer commercially available. Serving enterprise customers including Amgen (drug discovery), BMW Group (materials simulation), JPMorgan Chase (financial optimization), and SoftBank Corp. (AI acceleration), Quantinuum was formed in November 2021 through the merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum Computing. CEO Ilyas Khan.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.