TransDigm (TDG) is often framed as a leveraged aerospace supplier whose upside depends mainly on air-travel demand. That view misses the core of the model. TransDigm owns a portfolio of proprietary aircraft components with durable aftermarket economics, long product lives, and a business model built to turn pricing power into very high margins. Leverage is real, but the moat is the installed base.
Why TransDigm should be analyzed through proprietary aftermarket exposure, not just aerospace cyclicality
In fiscal second-quarter 2026, TransDigm reported net sales of $2.54 billion, up 18% from the prior-year quarter, with net income of $536 million and EBITDA As Defined of $1.34 billion. EBITDA As Defined margin was 52.6%, and organic sales growth was 11.0%.
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Management said commercial aftermarket posted the highest growth among its three major end markets, with the commercial transport segment growing 16% in the quarter. Commercial OEM revenue also increased at a double-digit percentage rate as OEM build rates improved. That shows the company is participating in the recovery from two directions, but with the better economics still tied to aftermarket demand.
The 2025 10-K explains why that mix matters. TransDigm estimates that about 90% of fiscal 2025 net sales came from proprietary products, about 55% came from the aftermarket, and aftermarket consumption on a given aircraft can last roughly 25 to 30 years, while a platform itself can be produced for 20 to 30 years. That gives a product life cycle that can exceed 50 years.
How the portfolio structure supports margin durability
TransDigm’s model depends on owning narrowly critical parts rather than competing in broad commodity categories. The 2025 10-K describes the company as a leading designer, producer, and supplier of highly engineered aircraft components critical to safe and effective aircraft operation across commercial and military platforms.
The annual results show how powerful that structure can be. In fiscal 2025, TransDigm generated $8.83 billion of net sales, $5.31 billion of gross profit, equal to 60.1% of net sales, and $4.76 billion of EBITDA As Defined, equal to a 53.9% margin. That helps explain why the margin profile has stayed elite even while individual end markets move at different speeds.
The latest 10-Q adds another clue. It notes that Jet Parts Engineering, acquired shortly after the quarter, derives nearly all of its revenue from the commercial aftermarket, while Victor Sierra serves aftermarket demand primarily in general and business aviation. That fits the company’s long-running strategy of deepening proprietary aftermarket exposure.
Why the leverage debate is real but only part of the story
The bear case on TransDigm usually starts with debt, and that is reasonable. Interest expense is material, and management’s acquisition model depends on continued access to capital. In the second quarter, TransDigm said higher interest expense partly offset the benefit of stronger sales and operating execution.
But the leverage discussion misses something important when it ignores the cash-generating quality of the assets. A business producing EBITDA As Defined above 50% and anchored in proprietary aftermarket parts has more room to service debt than a conventional cyclical manufacturer. It also has more ways to compound value through bolt-on acquisitions, pricing discipline, and installed-base expansion.
What investors should watch next
Investors should keep watching the balance between commercial aftermarket growth and OEM recovery. If aftermarket remains the faster-growing and higher-quality channel, the thesis stays intact. Margin discipline also matters, especially as acquisitions are integrated and as management keeps returning capital to shareholders.
The latest quarter showed the core value drivers working again at scale: proprietary content, recurring aftermarket demand, disciplined pricing, and acquisition-led portfolio refinement. That is why TransDigm looks better understood as an installed-base and pricing compounder than as a simple leveraged aerospace trade.
Key Signals for Investors
Fiscal Q2 2026 net sales rose 18% to $2.54 billion, while EBITDA As Defined reached $1.34 billion with a 52.6% margin.
Commercial aftermarket was the fastest-growing major end market in fiscal Q2 2026, and TransDigm said commercial transport aftermarket revenue grew 16%.
The 2025 10-K says about 90% of fiscal 2025 net sales came from proprietary products and about 55% came from the aftermarket.
Product life economics are unusually long, with aftermarket consumption estimated at roughly 25 to 30 years and total platform life cycles potentially exceeding 50 years.









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