GE names John Flannery CEO as Immelt to step down after 16 years
BENGALURU: General Electric Co. said chief executive officer (CEO) Jeff Immelt would step down, capping a 16-year term that included steering the conglomerate through the financial crisis but saw its shares losing nearly a third of their value on worries about the company’s growth.
GE said John Flannery, the head of its healthcare unit, would replace Immelt as CEO, effective 1 August, and as chairman after Immelt retires on 31 December.
The company’s shares jumped 4.1% to $29.09 in early trading on Monday as Flannery’s appointment to the top job ended a sixyear long succession planning programme.
Immelt, 61, who took over from Jack Welch in 2001, has been credited with guiding the company through the recession, which nearly toppled the maker of jet engines, wind turbines and locomotives.
Immelt also oversaw the divestment of GE Capital—its massive lending unit—shifting the conglomerate’s focus from finance to manufacturing, and bet on developing digital technologies to transform the company’s factories.
However, since Immelt became CEO in 2001, GE’s shares fell 30%, while the S&P 500 index more than doubled. That underperformance had some pressing for more urgency from Immelt.
Activist investor Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management, which owned 68.9 million shares of GE worth $2.05 billion as of 30 March, has criticized the company’s performance and pressed for asset sales and cost cutting.
Stifel analyst Robert McCarthy said the timing was not surprising because of the serial underperformance of the stock and “investor fatigue with management’s continued perceived ungainly portfolio actions”.
During Immelt’s tenure, GE bought French peer Alstom’s power business and announced a deal to acquire oil and gas company Baker Hughes, while jettisoning the NBC unit and even its famed appliances division.
Still, the company, the oldest surviving member of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, has struggled to boost sales significantly in the past few quarters.
In particular, the company’s cash flow has been a cause for concern.
Flannery, 55, who is currently president and CEO of GE Healthcare, joined GE Capital about three decades ago. At the lending unit, he focused on leveraged buyouts and later led the corporate restructuring group.
He has led GE’s India business, its equity business in Latin America and the GE Capital business for Argentina and Chile.