international business
“10-K Item 1A: 'During 2025, we derived approximately 31% of our revenues from international business, including U.S. exports.'”
Updated
The most significant concentration Textron discloses is international business at 31%, classified MEDIUM by disclosed size. Below: the full set from the latest 10-K — verbatim quotes, filing references, and a synthesis of what these exposures mean together.
Model-generated analysis — not investment advice. Not a registered investment advisor. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
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Source: Textron’s SEC Form 10-K filed — view the filing on SEC EDGAR ↗
Each card carries a disclosed-size chip (HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW — how large the exposure is as a share of revenue, not how dangerous it is) and a nature tag: Built-in(the company’s own model, geography, or products) or Outside party (an external customer, supplier, or distributor it relies on).
“10-K Item 1A: 'During 2025, we derived approximately 31% of our revenues from international business, including U.S. exports.'”
“10-K Item 1A: 'During 2025, we derived approximately 27% of our revenues from sales to a variety of U.S. Government entities.'”
The company's concentration profile combines a geographic revenue exposure and a government-customer dependency, both at medium disclosed size, that partially overlap and reinforce each other. Approximately 31% of revenues came from international business, including U.S. exports, during 2025 — a medium-share structural exposure tied to where the company's aerospace, defense, and industrial end-markets are geographically distributed. This reflects the global nature of the business rather than reliance on any single foreign counterparty or region; the risk channel runs through foreign-exchange, trade policy, and export-control developments rather than a specific bilateral relationship. The U.S. Government customer base accounted for approximately 27% of revenues in 2025, a medium-share mixed exposure. The mixed character is appropriate: on one hand, the government represents a structurally stable demand source with long-program cycles and appropriated budgets; on the other, the relationship carries dependency attributes — budget sequestrations, continuing resolutions, program cancellations, and evolving defense priorities can alter revenue in ways outside the company's control. The two exposures partially overlap since some U.S. Government revenue flows through international programs or foreign military sales. On balance, neither exposure reaches a level that would independently determine the investment verdict, but together they indicate that defense-budget dynamics and export-market access are the two primary macro variables to monitor for this business.
For the engine’s reasoning on TXT’s current verdict — including which dimensions drove the score — see the per-dimension breakdown.
| Symbol | Name | HIGH | MEDIUM | LOW | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AVAV | AeroVironment, Inc. | 1 | 1 | 2 | 4 |
| ACHR | Archer Aviation Inc. | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| AXON | Axon Enterprise, Inc. | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| TXT● | Textron Inc. | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| AIR | AAR Corp. | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| ATRO | Astronics Corporation | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Concentration counts reflect items disclosed in each peer’s most recent 10-K; disclosed-size classification uses TrendMatrix’s internal 10-K extraction taxonomy.