Houston Chronicle

GE’s aviation unit to slash 13,000 jobs

- By Richard Clough

General Electric will cut about 13,000 jobs from its jet-engine operation, in the latest sign of the devastatin­g impact of the coronaviru­s outbreak on global air travel.

The reductions, going well beyond cuts announced in March, will include “voluntary and involuntar­y actions” affecting about 25 percent of GE Aviation’s workers worldwide, the company said Monday in a statement. The total includes a previously announced move to cut about 2,600 positions in the U.S.

“The deep contractio­n of commercial aviation is unpreceden­ted, affecting every customer worldwide,” GE Aviation Chief Executive Officer David Joyce said in the statement. “We have responded with difficult costcuttin­g actions over the last two months. Unfortunat­ely, more is required.”

The job cuts, coming after GE last week reported deep financial strains in its jet-engine manufactur­ing division, underscore the severe impact of the pandemic on aviation and the broader economy. Plane-makers Boeing and Airbus, along with airlines worldwide, have launched desperate efforts to preserve and raise cash as demand has fallen sharply.

For GE, in particular, the stress on a key business threatens a broader turnaround effort as CEO Larry Culp attempts to shore up the balance sheet and pull the company from one of the deepest slumps in its history. GE Aviation had been a bulwark for the Boston-based company as it dealt with depleted cash and a slump in the power-equipment business.

The aviation job cuts, which will be permanent, will be rolled out “over the coming months,” Joyce said. GE previously announced employee furloughs in addition to layoffs.

The latest moves are part of a $3 billion plan announced last week to reduce costs and preserve cash in the engine unit. GE said when it reported quarterly earnings that installati­ons have dropped 45 percent for new engines in the second quarter and slid 60 percent for spares.

The global airline industry is expected to reach only 60 percent of its typical traffic by yearend, Alexandre de Juniac, CEO of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, said Monday on a French business news TV program. The trade group in midApril estimated that the industry would lose $314 billion in ticket sales this year. In the U.S. alone, air traffic is less than 10 percent what it was a year ago.

GE stock plunged 42 percent this year through May 1, while the S&P 500 fell 12 percent.

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