Safran SA is in talks to acquire an arm of Raytheon Technologies Corp. that makes products including flight controls, in what could be its biggest purchase in six years.

The French aerospace company is discussing a deal to buy “certain flight control and actuation activities” from Raytheon as part of a competitive bidding process, it said in a statement that confirmed an earlier Bloomberg News report.

Safran is in advanced negotiations over a transaction that could value the business at about $1 billion, people with knowledge of the matter said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential information. It’s been competing with several private equity suitors, they said.

Bloomberg News reported in January that Arlington, Virginia-based Raytheon was exploring a sale of the unit. The purchase would rank as Safran’s biggest deal since its 2017 agreement to buy plane-seat supplier Zodiac Aerospace SA for nearly €9 billion (about $9.6 billion) including debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. 

There’s no certainty discussions between Raytheon and Safran will result in a deal, the French company said in a statement, without disclosing any terms. A representative for Raytheon declined to comment.

Raytheon, led by chief executive officer Gregory Hayes, consists of Pratt & Whitney, Collins Aerospace and a large defense portfolio spanning missiles, space systems and intelligence products. The actuation business sits within Collins, having first been a division of Rockwell Collins and then United Technologies prior to its merger with Raytheon, which closed in 2020.