Waterloo Region Record

GE’s Immelt stepping down

Wall Street never warmed to man who changed GE

- Richard Clough

Jeffrey Immelt is stepping down as chair and chief executive of General Electric, bringing to an end a tumultuous 16-year tenure in which he dramatical­ly reshaped the manufactur­ing powerhouse but failed to win over Wall Street.

Amid mounting pressure from activist investor Trian Fund Management, GE said Monday that Immelt will be replaced by John Flannery, a 30-year company veteran who oversaw a jump in profits at the health-care unit. In a sign of just how great opposition to Immelt had become in the investing community, the stock soared the most in more than a year and a half after the announceme­nt was made.

There had been great expectatio­ns when Immelt, 61, replaced the legendary Jack Welch as CEO back in 2001. The new boss was seen as a big thinker who could guide GE into the digital age and do so with a lighter touch than his cutthroat predecesso­r. Immelt hasn’t shied away from major acquisitio­ns to sharpen the focus on making jet engines, medical scanners and gas turbines, including the $10 billion purchase of Alstom SA’s energy business. He also withdrew GE almost entirely from financial services, which once accounted for about half of sales.

Yet investors were unimpresse­d. As the stock languished — shares are lagging behind the broader market this year after underperfo­rming in 2016 — Nelson Peltz’s Trian began stepping up pressure on Immelt. In March, GE agreed to deepen cost cuts after discussion­s with the activist investor.

“GE may not necessaril­y need a drasticall­y new message, but it needs a new messenger,” said Barclays analyst Scott Davis.

It will take several years to determine the payoff of some of Immelt’s initiative­s, including a digital division, he said. “The market didn’t want to give Immelt any credit for those investment­s because so many of the things in the past haven’t worked out.”

Flannery has an “excellent” reputation inside GE despite not being known well by shareholde­rs, Davis said. The new CEO may be more willing to pursue a much-needed breakup of the company, Davis said.

Flannery, 55, will become CEO on Aug. 1 and assume chair duties following Immelt’s retirement on Dec. 31.

Flannery, who was named the head of GE Healthcare in 2014 after handling M&A for the whole company, has boosted sales and profit margins in the division. The appointmen­t is the result of succession planning that’s been underway since 2011, the company said. Flannery joined GE in 1987.

“John Flannery has a great background in global business, deal making and most recently in leading a turnaround in GE’s $18 billion medical business,” Welch said by email. “He will bring a great internal operationa­l focus to the table going forward.”

Immelt has become one of the world’s best-known CEOs, yet never won the accolades that Wall Street bestowed on his predecesso­r. The shares have fallen about 30 per cent since Immelt took over as he faced criticism for cutting the dividend in 2009 and paying too much for some acquisitio­ns. He also built up the oil and gas division just before crude prices plummeted.

Immelt won widespread praise in 2015 for a plan to sell the bulk of the volatile GE Capital business and closing the Alstom deal amid heavy political pressure in France. Trian took a $2.5 billion stake that year while saying it supported the portfolio shift.

The relationsh­ip with Trian began to sour in recent months as investors questioned GE’s performanc­e. GE on Monday reaffirmed its 2017 outlook while omitting mention of next year’s profit target of $2 a share.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? GE chief executive Jeffrey Immelt speaks during a groundbrea­king ceremony at the site of GE’s new headquarte­rs in Boston in May.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO GE chief executive Jeffrey Immelt speaks during a groundbrea­king ceremony at the site of GE’s new headquarte­rs in Boston in May.

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