The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

GE ices pensions for 20K workers

Company seeking to trim its debt pile

- By Cathy Bussewitz

NEW YORK >> General Electric is freezing the pension plans of about 20,000 of its workers and offering pension buyouts to 100,000 former employees as it attempts to reduce its mountain of debt.

The industrial conglomera­te has been selling off assets and streamlini­ng its operations amid sagging profits and other setbacks in recent years. It has about $105.8 billion in overall debt, and whittling that down has become a priority for CEO Larry Culp.

The Boston company said Monday that its actions would trim its pension deficit by about $5 billion to $8 billion, and net debt by about $4 billion to $6 billion.

“Returning GE to a position of strength has required us to make several difficult decisions, and today’s decision to freeze the pension is no exception,” said Kevin Cox, chief human resources officer at GE, in a prepared statement. “We carefully weighed market trends and our strategic priority to improve our financial position with the impact to our employees.”

GE closed its pension plan to new beneficiar­ies in 2012. Companies nationwide have been capping or freezing defined-benefit pension plans, which promise regular retirement payments for the remainder of a beneficiar­y’s life. Many switched to 401k plans, which include contributi­ons from employers and employees but which do not guarantee a certain level of payments.

“Freezing the pension plan is sort of a ‘stop the bleeding’ type of measure,” said Zorast Wadia, principal and consulting actuary at Milliman, an actuarial firm. “It does nothing to that deficit. Essentiall­y what you’re doing is you’re limiting future accruals.”

GE’s pension actions should

have been taken much sooner, but the company needed to first secure the funding from its portfolio sales so it could re-deploy those proceeds, said Deane Dray, managing director of RBC Capital Markets, in a note to investors.

For the pension buyouts, GE is offering a one-time lump-sum payment to former employees who have not started monthly pension plan payments. Those who take GE up on the offer will receive, in one payment, the total amount that actuaries estimate they would receive after retiring at around age 65.

GE also said it plans to make early payments to cover its 2020 pension obligation­s using funds it raised by selling its stake in Wabtec, a transporta­tion business, and selling part of its stake in Baker Hughes, the oil and gas company. It also plans to use funds it expects to raise when it sells its BioPharma unit.

Pension obligation­s represent about $21 billion of GE’s overall debt.

GE said it will continue to evaluate its options to strengthen its balance sheet.

Wadia said that the majority of companies his firm tracks have frozen their pension funds, but some — primarily in financial services or the not-forprofit sector — have pension plans where beneficiar­ies continue to accrue benefits.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A robotic arm with a highintens­ity blowtorch is remotely operated to test ceramic matrix composites, which make engines more durable, heat-resistant and efficient, at the General Electric Aviation plant in Evendale, Ohio. General Electric Co. said Monday that it will freeze its pension plan for about 20,700 salaried workers as part of its debt-cutting plan.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A robotic arm with a highintens­ity blowtorch is remotely operated to test ceramic matrix composites, which make engines more durable, heat-resistant and efficient, at the General Electric Aviation plant in Evendale, Ohio. General Electric Co. said Monday that it will freeze its pension plan for about 20,700 salaried workers as part of its debt-cutting plan.

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