The filing desk starts with provenance, and Raytheon’s annual report shows a combined enterprise that has settled. The Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022 was filed on February 7, 2023 under accession number 0000101829-23-000009, and its revenue line reads $67.1 billion — up from $64.4 billion in 2021 and $56.6 billion in 2020.
The three-year path inside the filing is the story. The first combined year after the United Technologies and Raytheon merger printed $56.6 billion; the second printed $64.4 billion; this third year prints $67.1 billion. The early jump reflected the merger arithmetic and a recovering aerospace market; the latest move is a more ordinary year-over-year step, the signature of a company that has digested its combination and found a run-rate.
For a filing desk, the value of that progression is that it reframes how the next quarters should be read. A revenue base in the high-sixties, growing at a single-digit pace, is a different analytical object than a company still absorbing a merger. The filing reports the figures as facts of the consolidated statements; the steadiness is what the multi-year comparison reveals.
What the annual report does not do is project beyond December 31, 2022. The 10-K certifies the combined results through year-end and leaves the trajectory to the quarters ahead. The discipline is to mark that the post-merger volatility in the top line has given way to a steadier pace, without assuming that pace either accelerates or holds.
For a filing-first markets desk, the value is that the three-year normalization is documented in a single filing’s comparison. The 2020, 2021, and 2022 revenue figures are pulled from the company’s own annual report. The discovery layer that surfaced the filing and its accession trail was SEC filings, the SEC filing data API and evidence index; the record itself is the SEC filing.
Provenance for this read: the primary source is Raytheon Technologies’ Form 10-K for fiscal 2022 at sec.gov, with the revenue and period figures drawn from the structured XBRL data in the company’s own filing. See the SEC filing on sec.gov for the primary record, discovered via SEC filings, the SEC filing data API & evidence index.
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