But 2023 brought a complication that reminded investors that aerospace engineering has no shortcuts: a powder metal contamination issue in older Pratt & Whitney GTF engines forced the company to ground hundreds of aircraft for accelerated inspections and parts replacement. For investors, military planners, airline executives, and students of American industrial history alike, RTX is a story impossible to ignore. CEO Christopher Calio, who succeeded Gregory Hayes in 2023, leads the enterprise with a focus on organic growth, R&D investment, and shareholder returns. RIS focuses on advanced sensors, intelligence systems, surveillance, reconnaissance platforms, and cybersecurity — essentially the information technology layer of modern warfare. The company's ability to serve both commercial aviation — a fundamentally optimistic, growth-oriented industry — and national defense — an industry shaped by threat assessment and geopolitical realism — gives it a distinctive resilience that pure-play defense or pure-play aerospace companies cannot match. This segment is most exposed to competition from defense-focused technology companies and systems integrators, where contract awards are heavily influenced by personnel relationships, program incumbency, and agency-specific trust developed over years of classified performance. A startup cannot build the Patriot system's 40-year operational history. The competitive threat from technology entrants is most acute in software, AI, and autonomous systems — precisely the domains where RTX has been investing most aggressively through its RIS segment and its internal venture investments. This growth was driven by strong performance across all four segments, though the pace was uneven. The consequence was that hundreds of aircraft — predominantly Airbus A320neo and A220 jets operated by airlines worldwide — required accelerated engine inspections and, in many cases, replacement of affected components. The defense industry broadly, and RTX specifically, has faced investor scrutiny over development program cost overruns that can transform profitable contracts into loss-generating obligations. Building the organizational and physical infrastructure to compete for classified intelligence systems contracts takes decades. New entrants — even well-capitalized technology companies — cannot simply acquire this capability. It must be grown organically through sustained engagement with defense customers, demonstrated performance on progressively sensitive programs, and culture aligned with government security requirements. RTX's growth strategy rests on four interconnected pillars: aftermarket expansion, international defense sales growth, next-generation platform positioning, and portfolio optimization. As the global fleet of GTF-powered aircraft grows — Airbus has delivered thousands of A320neo family jets and has a backlog of thousands more — the aftermarket revenue opportunity expands proportionally. Each new engine entering service creates a 25-to-30-year stream of parts and service revenue. RTX has invested in expanding its MRO network, including new facilities in Singapore and Poland, to capture this demand closer to its origins. Collins Aerospace is pursuing a similar aftermarket expansion strategy, investing in connectivity and cabin upgrade programs that generate recurring revenue from existing airline customers. International defense sales growth is perhaps the highest-velocity growth vector in RTX's near-term outlook. The company has publicly identified international as a key growth driver, with the addressable market expanding as European NATO members increase procurement and Indo-Pacific allies modernize air defense architectures. RTX aims to grow international defense sales from roughly 35% of defense revenue toward 40 to 45% over the medium term. Portfolio optimization, following the 2023 spinoffs of Carrier and Otis, has left RTX as a pure-play aerospace and defense company, allowing management focus and capital allocation to be concentrated on the highest-return opportunities within the core sectors. On the commercial aviation side, the International Air Transport Association projects continued passenger traffic growth through 2030, underpinned by Asia-Pacific demand. Airlines are accelerating replacement of older aircraft with fuel-efficient narrow-bodies powered by GTF and LEAP engines, which should drive long-term Pratt & Whitney aftermarket growth once the near-term GTF remediation burden diminishes. In the postwar decades, Raytheon pursued an aggressive acquisition strategy, acquiring companies in defense electronics, missile systems, and professional services. The concurrent spinoffs of Carrier Global Corporation and Otis Worldwide Corporation — separating UTC's building products businesses — focused the new Raytheon Technologies squarely on aerospace and defense.