In major overhaul, GE to shed Chicago- based GE Healthcare
NEW YORK — General Electric plans to cast away its Chicago- based health care business and sell its interest in the oil- services company Baker Hughes.
GE Healthcare is a $ 19 billion company that makes medical imaging equipment and provides cell and gene therapy technologies. The company employs about 54,000 people worldwide.
GE’s latest round of winnowing arrived Tuesday, the first time since 1907 that General Electric Co. would not be a member of the Dow Jones industrial average at the opening bell. Shares rose nearly 8 percent.
The company said it will be able to reduce its debt by $ 25 billion and remove additional risk as it reimagines itself as something very different from the multinational conglomerate it was before the Great Recession.
Given the steady drumbeat of asset sales — GE said Monday that it would sell its distributed power unit to Advent International for $ 3.25 billion — it is easy to lose sight of how radically the company has changed in less than a decade. On the cusp of the recession, GE was one of the nation’s biggest lenders, its appliances were sold by the millions to homeowners around the world, and it oversaw a multinational media conglomerate.
On Tuesday, General Electric presented itself as a vastly reduced entity focused on aviation, power, and renewable energy, dropping health care entirely from its plans.
“Today marks an important milestone in GE’s history,” CEO John Flannery said in prepared remarks. “We are aggressively driving forward as an aviation, power and renewable energy company — three highly complementary businesses poised for future growth.”
Flannery said during a conference call that the new GE will have more of a high tech and industrial focus.
“We’ve changed many things, but the essence of GE endures,” he said.
GE will sell about 20 percent of the health care business now and distribute the rest to its shareholders over the next 12 to 18 months as the company sheds those assets.
On Tuesday, Walgreens Boots Alliance replaced GE in the Dow Jones industrial average. It was an original member of the Dow industrials dating back to 1896.