The Oklahoman

GE’s new CEO signals cost cuts, other changes for Dow’s big dawdler

- BY RICHARD CLOUGH

General Electric Co.’s new boss has barely uttered a word in public during his first two months on the job. But CEO John Flannery is already signaling his intention to forge one of the most sweeping makeovers in the company’s 125-year history.

On Monday, he accepted a board appointmen­t for Ed Garden, a founding partner of activist shareholde­r Trian Fund Management, which has been pressuring GE for an overhaul. That came three days after the company named a new chief financial officer and announced the exit of two other high-profile executives. Flannery is also seeking deep cost cuts and weighing portfolio changes as he seeks to reverse this year’s biggest drop on the Dow Jones industrial average.

Flannery, who last week also took on the chairman title, may be poised to slash earnings expectatio­ns when he presents plans to revitalize the beleaguere­d manufactur­er at a meeting scheduled for Nov. 13. Even a dividend cut is a possibilit­y, according to Vertical Research Partners, as GE contends with weak cash flows and sluggish demand in the power-generation and oil markets.

“If earnings and cash flow are going even lower than we thought, the dividend clearly should be cut,’’ analyst Jeff Sprague of Vertical Research said in an Oct. 6 note. “GE could end up in better place once the dust settles but investors should steer clear until we learn more. That better place could be with a starting point much lower for the stock price.’’

Garden, who works closely with Trian’s Nelson Peltz, will replace Robert Lane on the board, GE said in a statement Monday. The Bostonbase­d maker of jet engines, gas turbines and ultrasound machines maintains “active and constructi­ve dialogue” with Trian, according to the statement.

“Like other GE shareholde­rs, I am disappoint­ed by the recent performanc­e of GE’s stock,” Garden said in the statement. “But I continue to believe that GE represents an attractive long-term investment opportunit­y with significan­t upside.”

GE shares fell 97 cents, or nearly 4 percent, to close Monday at $23.43. GE has tumbled 23 percent this year, putting it on track for the worst performanc­e for a calendar year since 2008.

Flannery has been meeting with investors and has said he will consider all options to turn the company around. He has cut services such as corporate jets and company cars as part of an existing plan to eliminate $2 billion of costs through 2018. Analysts believe he may reduce expenses by an even greater amount.

The face of GE changed dramatical­ly last week as several of the company’s most well-known executives, including Chief Financial Officer Jeff Bornstein, stepped down. Vice Chairs Beth Comstock, GE’s top female executive and a leading figure in its embrace of Silicon Valley, and John Rice, the primary internatio­nal officer, also said they would retire. The departures, announced late on Oct. 6, came shortly after Jeffrey Immelt stepped down as chairman earlier than planned.

Jamie Miller, who heads GE Transporta­tion, was appointed CFO.

Bornstein’s resignatio­n comes after he was passed over to succeed Immelt. When Flannery’s appointmen­t was announced, Bornstein, 51, was promoted to vice chair and the company said he would work closely with the new boss.

The departing CFO was regarded among investors and analysts as a knowledgea­ble and plain-spoken partner to Immelt’s bigvision CEO. Bornstein, who joined GE in 1989 and held a number of financeori­ented roles, was considered a major driver of GE’s plan to shed about $200 billion of lending businesses and refocus on industrial manufactur­ing.

But Bornstein’s star faded in recent months as he shouldered some of the blame for GE’s cashflow issues. The executive changes “serve to build expectatio­ns that gamechangi­ng strategic moves will be unveiled’’ at the Nov. 13 meeting, Deane Dray, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets, said in a note to clients.

 ?? GOODNEY] [BLOOMBERG PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHE­R ?? GE CEO John Flannery speaks in 2016 during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York.
GOODNEY] [BLOOMBERG PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHE­R GE CEO John Flannery speaks in 2016 during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York.

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