--- title: "Goldman Sachs is optimistic about the future of HAECO: Multiple driving factors are expected to boost the stock price! Potential upside of nearly 19%" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/258050507.md" description: "Goldman Sachs is optimistic about the future of Heico Corporation, believing that factors such as the aerospace aftermarket, market share growth, profit margins, and mergers and acquisitions will drive its stock price. Goldman Sachs maintains a \"Buy\" rating with a 12-month target price of $382, indicating an upside potential of about 19% from the current stock price. Heico Corporation focuses on replacement parts for commercial aircraft and defense products, has active capital deployment, and has not seen a slowdown in the commercial aftermarket" datetime: "2025-09-19T09:13:32.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/258050507.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/258050507.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/258050507.md) --- # Goldman Sachs is optimistic about the future of HAECO: Multiple driving factors are expected to boost the stock price! Potential upside of nearly 19% According to the Zhitong Finance APP, Goldman Sachs recently held an investor meeting with the management of aerospace and defense supplier HEICO Corporation (HEI.US). Goldman Sachs pointed out that factors such as the aerospace aftermarket, market share growth, profit margins, and mergers and acquisitions will drive the company's stock price. Goldman Sachs maintains a "Buy" rating on HEICO Corporation, with a 12-month target price of $382. This target price represents an upside potential of about 19% compared to the stock's closing price of $321.74 on Thursday. Data shows that HEICO Corporation is a supplier in the aerospace and defense sector, focusing on manufacturing replacement parts for commercial aircraft and defense products. In the commercial aviation field, the company is the largest independent manufacturer of aircraft replacement parts. In the defense market, the company produces niche subcomponents for categories such as targeting technology and simulation equipment. The company is divided into two divisions: the Flight Support Group (FSG) and the Electronic Technologies Group (ETG), both of which serve the aerospace and defense sectors to varying degrees. Goldman Sachs noted in its research report that the meeting focused on capital deployment, growth in the aerospace aftermarket, PMA (Parts Manufacturer Approval), Wencor integration, and profit margins across various business segments. Here are the key points from the meeting. **1\. Capital Deployment** HEICO Corporation stated that the pipeline for merger and acquisition opportunities is very active. As profitability and valuation multiples in the aerospace and defense industry normalize post-pandemic, more companies are entering the market (including founder-led, traditional investment bank-led deals, and opportunities for divestitures). HEICO is evaluating a roughly equal number of opportunities in both the Flight Support Group (FSG) and the Electronic Technologies Group (ETG), with a continued focus on core commercial aviation and defense businesses. The company's net debt/EBITDA ratio is currently about 2.0 times, providing ample balance sheet capacity for acquisitions. **2\. Aerospace Aftermarket** HEICO has not observed a slowdown in commercial aftermarket activity, attributed to an aging fleet, limited supply of new aircraft, and sustained flight demand. The company also noted that many airlines have made significant investments in retrofitting and modernizing mid-life aircraft, thereby extending the retirement timeline of these planes. In the long term, aftermarket growth is expected to gradually return to normal, equivalent to about twice the GDP/ASK (Available Seat Kilometers, a capacity metric), rather than the current level of approximately 14-15%. Although demand has softened in some regions of the U.S., HEICO's business activity remains strong, with the company stating that it has been almost unaffected so far this year. **3\. PMA (Parts Manufacturer Approval)** HEICO sells PMA parts to commercial aviation and defense customers, maintaining the same discount as original equipment manufacturer (OEM) parts in both end markets. When the company launches new PMA parts to the market, it sets the pricing for those parts at 70% of the OEM parts price and maintains this price in long-term agreements over several years. As OEMs continue to raise prices on original parts, HEICO's discount margin expands, sometimes reaching 50-60% of the OEM parts price. This pricing strategy positions HEICO favorably when selling more PMA parts to customers, thereby increasing market share, after which the company gradually raises prices In the commercial aviation sector, Haike Aviation's PMA business has become relatively mature, while in the defense sector, the adoption of PMA is still in its early stages and is unlikely to have a substantial impact on performance in 2025. The company's management believes that the PMA opportunities in the defense sector are roughly equivalent to adding 1-2 large airline customers. PMA in the defense sector is typically limited to commercial derivative models, such as the Poseidon P8 (737NG derivative), KC-135 (367-80 derivative), or KC-46A (767 derivative). **4\. Wencor Integration** Haike Aviation continues to realize synergies from the acquisition of Wencor. Although the initial plan was to more comprehensively integrate this business into Haike Aviation's operational system, the company found that significant cross-selling and MRO (Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul) synergies could be achieved while keeping Wencor relatively independent. Nevertheless, there are still opportunities to mobilize personnel and product lines between Haike Aviation and Wencor, and maintaining Wencor's independent operation has actually broadened the company's future acquisition horizons. The integration of Wencor is driving higher FSG profit margins, as the company is able to sell more PMA parts, which have lower cost intensity and higher profit margins. **5\. Profit Margin Situation of Various Departments** Haike Aviation reiterated its expectation that the EBIT profit margin for FSG will be around 24% in the medium term, with further upside potential in the long term. The recent outperformance in profit margins is attributed to higher defense business volume and PMA-friendly maintenance operations. Approximately 15-20% of FSG's revenue comes from the defense sector, where Haike Aviation produces structural components for missile defense (accounting for more than half of the defense revenue in this segment) and drone systems. In ETG, profit margins remain below pre-pandemic levels, partly due to the acquisition of Exxelia, which has brought about a 200 basis point pressure on EBITA profit margins, as well as changes in the business mix (defense revenue currently accounts for about 40% of ETG's revenue, compared to about 50% pre-pandemic). 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