The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

ABB’s potential break-up heralds robots, windfall for Swiss giant

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PARIS: ABB Ltd chief executive officer Ulrich Spiesshofe­r may be out to prove once again that patience is a virtue.

It was just after the financial crisis in 2009 that Spiesshofe­r, then the Swiss engineerin­g company’s head of corporate developmen­t, was given the task of turning around the ailing robotics business. The activity had fallen on hard times amid what ABB called “the worst market conditions ever.”

Today, the unit is the company’s most profitable and is vying to become the largest supplier of factory automation in the world amid surging demand. It could also become the centerpiec­e of a reconfigur­ed ABB.

In a more recent example of playing for time, Spiesshofe­r is considerin­g putting another division - power grids - on the block, Bloomberg News reported on Aug 23. It would come two years after he defied a campaign by an activist shareholde­r to do just that. In the meantime, he has said, the unit’s valuation has jumped. A spokesman declined to comment.

Power grids and robotics are two of four divisions within ABB, a sprawling manufactur­er that traces its roots to a pair of Swiss and Swedish companies that began operations in the late 19th century. That Spiesshofe­r is said to be considerin­g the firm’s breakup is testimony to the pressure on industrial companies like General Electric Co and Siemens AG to modernise their offerings and move away from conglomera­te-like structures.

“An exit from power grids would radically improve the group’s profile,” Deutsche Bank analyst Gael de Bray wrote in a report. It could add as much as 27% to the shares, he said.

The move would also turn the spotlight on robotics at a time when ABB is aiming to prevail over rivals like Kuka AG, Fanuc Corp. and Yaskawa Electric Corp. Its equipment includes the single-arm YuMi robot that can fit on electronic­s production lines and work with humans to assemble small parts. The 900-kg IRB 6620 model is among the biggest in the world and is typically used for welding at car plants.

The sale of ABB’s power grids unit would shrink the Swiss industrial giant by more than a fourth. It would also vindicate activist Cevian Capital, which has been pushing for the move for years.

Spiesshofe­r defied Cevian in 2016 by hanging on to the laggard unit, valued at an estimated US$10bil, that makes power transforme­rs, long distance electricit­y-transmissi­on systems and energy storage units.

A separation of power grids would have been “very dangerous,” the CEO warned at the time. Spiesshofe­r’s tune changed in July, when he told analysts ABB’s portfolio isn’t “cast in stone” and the value of the business after a turnaround is “much, much more” than a US$4bil to US$5bil estimate of two years ago. — Bloomberg

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