Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Historic $11 billion Wabtec, GE merger sees future in railroads

- By Daniel Moore

Thefirst major move in General Electric’s great unwinding targeted the Pittsburgh region Monday, with the troubled conglomera­te sending its century-old transporta­tion business to a Wilmerding company that has an even longer legacy in the rail industry.

Wabtec Corp. has signed an $11 billion deal to merge with GE Transporta­tion and fold the operation into its ever-growing empire of rail products and services. The combinatio­n is expected to more than double Wabtec’s annual revenues to $8 billion and create a Fortune 500 transporta­tion company with 27,000 employees spread across 50 countries.

The companies anticipate the deal — subject to a number of regulatory reviews, as well as approval by Wabtec shareholde­rs — will close in early 2019.

The merger is a big bet that both companies can overcome slowing business on the freight railroads. GE Transporta­tion, a Chicagobas­ed business that has its largest facility in Erie, last year reported the lowest sales since 2010. Wabtec has been quickly moving away fromthe freight market.

Speaking with analysts Monday, the two companies’ executives expressed optimism that a rebound is on the way and portrayed the deal as one bringing together two manufactur­ers that have endured the test of time: General Electric, co-founded in 1892 by Thomas Edison, and Wabtec, a company founded by George Westinghou­se in 1869 as Westinghou­se Air Brake Co.

“We believe that together we have a unique opportunit­y to drive tremendous growth in 2019 and beyond as the industry continues to improve,” said Raymond T. Betler, Wabtec’s president and chief executive officer,

who called the deal a oncein-a-lifetime opportunit­y.

Over the years, Wabtec has grown largely through acquisitio­ns — roughly a half-dozen a year, most of those involving manufactur­ersof small equipment.

In 2016, it announced a $1.7 billion purchase of Faiveley Transport, a French manufactur­er with expertise in the constructi­on of transit rail systems. Then its largest purchase ever, the Faiveley deal was a bid to focus more on passenger rail systems. Transit sales totaled 64 percent of Wabtec’s revenue in 2017, compared with 47 percent of revenuein 2016.

In combining with GE Transporta­tion, Wabtec is now expressing faith in a rebound in the freight rail markets.

In a presentati­on to investors, Wabtec showed GE Transporta­tion revenue growing as high as $4.9 billion in 2019, up from $3.9 billion in 2017. GE Transporta­tion has about 23,000 locomotive­sin use around the world, bringing Wabtec new opportunit­ies to repair and equip the vehicles.

Investors applauded the news,though a bit tepidly.

Wabtec’s stock price jumped more than 3 percent Monday to close at $98.55, while GE’s stock rose less than2 percent.

Matthew Brooklier, an analyst for Buckingham Research Group in New York City, called the deal “a home run for both Wabtec and GE Transporta­tion” given the pressure on General Electric to divest and Wabtec’s desire toexpand globally.

New CEO John Flannery has been looking to downsize General Electric, which many investors believe has growntoo big and convoluted over the years to include segments such as electric power, aviation, transporta­tion and health care. The company’s stock price plummeted by morethan 50 percent in 2017.

The deal with Wabtec uses a complicate­d financial maneuver to avoid a big tax bill — and it is a possible blueprint for future GE divestitur­es.

General Electric would sell a portion of the assets of GE Transporta­tion to Wabtec, spinning off another portion to GE shareholde­rs, and then merge this portion with Wabtec. It’s an arrangemen­t that would allow for $1.1 billion in tax savings, if the IRS approves, the companiess­aid.

Wabtec agreed to pay GE Transporta­tion $2.9 billion in cash for the assets, and then Wabtec shareholde­rs would get 49.9 percent of shares in the combined company. GE shareholde­rs would retain about 40 percent, and General Electric would get about 10 percent ownership interest in the combined company.

Wabtec’s corporate headquarte­rs would remain in Wilmerding, and Mr. Betler would remain Wabtec’s presidenta­nd CEO.

GE Transporta­tion’s assets would be folded into Wabtec’s freight subsidiary, which would be headquarte­red in Chicago. Rafael Santana, GE Transporta­tion’s president and CEO, would lead that segment. He said GE is seeing growth in rail traffic and “recent promising orders for new and modernized­locomotive­s.”

Mr. Betler has long wanted to use Wabtec’s advanced signaling, software and communicat­ionssystem­s to bring rail networks into the 21st century. For example, Wabtec makes positive train control systems, a safety feature that can take control of locomotive­s to prevent accidents causedby human error.

Congress has required the installati­on of positive train control on the entire U.S. passenger rail network and freight railroads that carry hazardous substances.

Wabtec already supplies equipment to GE’s locomotive­s, some of them carrying as much as $250,000 each in Wabtec-built compressor­s, brakes, electronic­s and automatedc­ontrol systems.

Financial analysts flagged the issue of debt. The acquisitio­n “raises the potential for the company’s already stretchedc­redit,” according to a report from S&P Global Ratings, which placed Wabtec’s credit rating on a watch list untilfurth­er notice.

Workers were cautiously optimistic.

GE Transporta­tion announced last year it planned to move production of locomotive­s from an Erie factory to Fort Worth, Texas, putting as many as 575 jobs in jeopardy.

“There’spotential­ly a good outcome for Erie in this,” said Scott Slawson, president of the United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America Local 506, which represents workers at that plant. “Instead of losing work, for a change, maybe we’llgain work.”

Mr. Slawson, who led protests in April outside GE’s annual investor meeting in Imperial, said he is relieved that GE Transporta­tion is merging with a Pennsylvan­iabased company in similar markets. Wabtec employs 700 people in the Pittsburgh region.

“It’s not like we’re dealing with someone who doesn’t understand locomotive­s,” he said. “There are some positive vibes about that.”

 ?? Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette ?? In this 2014 photo, a locomotive sits outside the Wabtec complex in Wilmerding.
Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette In this 2014 photo, a locomotive sits outside the Wabtec complex in Wilmerding.

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