The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

General Electric to split into 3 public companies

- By Michelle Chapman

General Electric, the storied American manufactur­er that struggled under its own weight after growing to become a sprawling conglomera­te, will divide itself into three public companies focused on aviation, healthcare and energy.

It is the culminatio­n of an arduous, years-long reshaping of a symbol of American manufactur­ing might that could signal the end of conglomera­tes as a whole.

“It’s over now,” said Nick Heymann of William Blair, who has followed GE for years. “In a digital economy, there’s no real room for it.”

The company has already rid itself of the products most Americans know, including its appliances last year and the light bulbs that GE had been making since the late 19th century when the company was founded.

The announceme­nt Tuesday marks the apogee of those efforts, divvying up an empire created in the 1980s under Jack Welch, one of America’s first CEO “superstars.”

GE’s stock became one of the most sought after on Wall Street under Welch, routinely outperform­ing peers and the broader market. Through the 1990s, it returned 1,120.6% on investment­s. GE’s revenue grew nearly fivefold during Welch’s tenure, and the company’s value increased 30-fold.

Yet the stock began to lag in the summer of 2001, the waning days of Welch’s rule, and near ruin for GE struck toward the close of the decade with the arrival of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. General Electric’s vulnerabil­ities were laid bare and the epicenter was GE Capital, the company’s financial wing.

Shares lost 80% of their value from the start of 2008 into the first few months of 2009 and has only recently begun to recover as the company unwinds much of what Welch built. The stock is already up 30% this year as the asset sales keep coming, and it rose 6% in heavy trading Tuesday, reaching a new high for the year.

GE’s aviation unit, it’s most profitable, will keep General Electric in the name. GE will spin off its healthcare business in early 2023 and its energy segment including renewable energy, power and digital operations in early 2024.

The decision to split was well received Tuesday by those who had pushed for the change.

“The strategic rationale is clear: three well-capitalize­d, industry leading public companies, each with deeper operationa­l focus and accountabi­lity, greater strategic flexibilit­y and tailored capital allocation decisions, wrote Trian Fund Management, a large stakeholde­r whose founding partner serves on GE’s board. “We salute GE CEO Larry Culp and his team’s efforts in driving longterm shareholde­r value.”

Heymann, of William Blair, said the conglomera­te model no longer works in a marketplac­e in which only the quick and agile survive.

Culp will become non-executive chairman of the healthcare company, with GE maintainin­g a 19.9% stake in the unit. Peter Arduini will serve as president and CEO of GE Healthcare effective Jan. 1, 2022. Scott Strazik will become CEO of the combined renewable energy, power, and digital business. Culp will lead the aviation business along with John Slattery, who will remain its CEO.

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