What does RTX Corporation (RTX) do?
RTX Corporation (RTX) is a mature compounder, in the Industrials sector, listed on NYSE, with a market capitalization of $237.1B. RTX trades against a final fair-value range of $134.31-$236.65, with the midpoint set by the accepted valuation synthesis rather than earlier draft model outputs. Our coverage uses an archetype-calibrated bear-case-first methodology that we apply uniformly to every covered ticker.
What RTX Corporation does, in one paragraph
RTX RTX trades against a final fair-value range of $134.31-$236.65, with the midpoint set by the accepted valuation synthesis rather than earlier draft model outputs.
Beyond the headline: RTX sits in the Industrials sector, which materially shapes how we value it. Sector context drives the cost-of-equity inputs, the peer set, the appropriate terminal multiple, and the scenario-probability weights — applying generic defaults across sectors is one of the largest single sources of valuation error in retail-grade research, which is why our methodology is calibrated archetype by archetype rather than applied uniformly.
Why the mature compounder archetype matters for RTX
As a mature compounder, RTX's economic engine has a recognizable shape that downstream parameters lean into. Hyper-growth names get faster terminal-growth decay and longer explicit-window forecasts; mature compounders get tighter sensitivity bands and heavier weight on PEG-adjusted peer multiples; cyclicals get mid-cycle earnings normalization and capital-cycle-aware scenario weights; financials and REITs get sector-specific lenses (price-to-book / FFO) instead of generic DCF. The mature compounder classification is the most consequential single input to our model.
RTX's competitive moat at a glance
On the competitive-moat axis, RTX scores 9/10 in our framework. The moat headline from the full report: "Wide". The moat score and its source (network effects, switching costs, intangibles, scale, regulatory advantage, etc.) are documented in §4 of the canonical report; the durability of the moat — not just its current width — is what drives long-run economic profit and therefore long-run total return.
Where to read more on RTX
The canonical report at /stocks/rtx/analysis is the deepest read: 14 sections covering executive summary, bear case (first), financial history, competitive moat, industry cycle, peer comparison, intrinsic valuation with sensitivity grids, scenario analysis, earnings decision tree, position management, three-investor perspectives, scorecard, and final recommendation. The /analysis/forecast tab focuses on the bull / base / bear price targets; /analysis/valuation walks through the model stack; /analysis/risks runs the full bear case in long form.
For readers who want to understand the methodology before reading any specific report, the public /methodology page documents the 9-phase framework end to end. The /independent-research page argues the positioning — the five testable promises every report carries.
Frequently asked questions
What sector is RTX in?
RTX is classified in the Industrials sector per the canonical report.
What is RTX's archetype and why does it matter?
RTX is a mature compounder. The archetype calibrates discount rate, terminal growth, deceleration curve, terminal multiple, and scenario probabilities. Applying the wrong archetype is one of the largest single sources of valuation error.
Does RTX have a moat?
RTX's moat score in our framework is 9/10. Headline: "Wide". The full breakdown lives in §4 Competitive Moat of the canonical report.
Where can I read more on RTX?
The canonical 14-section report is at /stocks/rtx/analysis, and tab-specific deep dives sit at /analysis/forecast, /analysis/valuation, /analysis/risks, /analysis/financials, /analysis/peers, and /analysis/scorecard for the same ticker.
Research for educational purposes. Not personalised investment advice. See the full RTX report for the canonical evidence.