Curtiss-Wright Corporation (CW) Stock Analysis & Winston Score
Curtiss-Wright makes specialized equipment and electronics used inside military vehicles, naval ships, nuclear power plants, and commercial aircraft. Its products include rugged computers, sensors, valves, and control systems — the kind of hardware that has to work perfectly in extreme conditions. The company sells mostly to the U.S. Department of Defense, defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics, and nuclear energy operators. Curtiss-Wright earns money by selling hardware, software, and aftermarket services under long-term government and industrial contracts. It operates mainly in the United States, with some business in Europe and allied nations. Its competitive edge comes from deep technical certifications and long-standing program relationships that are very hard for new competitors to break into. The key growth driver is rising U.S. and allied defense budgets, particularly spending on naval modernization and nuclear-powered submarines, though any slowdown in government defense appropriations would be a direct risk to revenue.
Winston Score: 57/100 — Good
A decent business — some strong pillars, some weaker.
- Quality: Mixed (11/30)
- Growth: Exceptional (18/20)
- Cash Flow: Exceptional (9/10)
- Stability: Exceptional (9/10)
- Valuation: Good (5/10)
- Ownership: Weak (2/15)
Key Facts
Price: $707.84
Market Cap: $26.1B
Sector: Industrials
Industry: Aerospace & Defense


