The Boston Globe

GE Aerospace sets tone with post-breakup profit goal, dividend

- By Ryan Beene

General Electric’s aerospace division set plans to return more of its profits to shareholde­rs, including restoratio­n of a significan­t dividend as it accelerate­s earnings as an independen­t company.

Operating earnings at GE Aerospace are forecast to reach $10 billion by 2028, the company said Thursday in a statement, up from a maximum of $6.5 billion expected this year. The company authorized $15 billion in stock buybacks and said it planned to resume paying a dividend pegged at an initial 30 percent of net income.

“Our financial outlook demonstrat­es confidence in our future, with a robust market and demand for our products and services underpinni­ng continued growth across revenue, operating profit and cash generation,” chief executive Larry Culp said in the statement.

The forecast is a sign of the earnings power awaiting investors once the conglomera­te completes a long-awaited breakup. GE Aerospace is poised to become an independen­t company following the April 2 spinoff of GE Vernova, its collection of energy-related businesses. The dividend plan is especially symbolic for GE, which set the standard as a multinatio­nal US conglomera­te for decades. Culp cut GE’s dividend to a token penny per share in one of his first moves after becoming CEO in 2018, when the company was in crisis.

The separation will complete a plan Culp announced in late 2021 to split the manufactur­er into three companies focused on aerospace, health care, and energy, culminatin­g an effort to pull the company from a deep slump.

GE Aerospace expects to generate more than $5 billion of free cash flow this year, and grow adjusted revenue in the low double digits or more, in terms of percentage increase, the company said.

The outlook underscore­s how the world’s largest maker of jet engines is poised to cash in as air travel continues to bounce back from its pandemic-induced slump. Investors increasing­ly see the once-troubled industrial giant as a potential earnings powerhouse, fueling a roughly 140 percent jump in its shares since spinning off its huge health care division in January 2023. That compares to a roughly 33 percent increase in the S&P 500 Index.

Melius Research analyst Rob Spingarn in January said GE will be the highest quality large-cap commercial aerospace company after the energy split. He cited more than 40,000 commercial engines being flown, maintenanc­e work on its latest-generation engine picking up, and the lack of a all-new jetliners planned by Boeing and Airbus .

“GE should be in a cash harvest for years to come,” Spingarn said in a client note.

 ?? SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG/FILE ?? GE Aerospace is poised to become an independen­t firm following the April 2 spinoff of GE Vernova, its energy-related businesses.
SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG/FILE GE Aerospace is poised to become an independen­t firm following the April 2 spinoff of GE Vernova, its energy-related businesses.

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