Business a.m.

The Breakup of GE and J&J: The End of the Conglomera­te?

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BREAKING UP ISN’T HARD to do in a bullish market. General Electric’s announceme­nt last week that it will split into three separate companies was quickly followed by similar news from Johnson & Johnson, which detailed plans to separate its consumer products business from its pharmaceut­ical and medical device operations.

The twin announceme­nts immediatel­y boosted stock prices for each firm, a sign that divestitur­e is a rational strategy for conglomera­tes once thought of as too big to fail. In the 1990s, GE was the most valuable company in the world, making everything from lightbulbs to jet engines and creating a massive finance unit that never recovered from the Great Recession.

“The word is finally starting to get out that divestitur­es are very valuecreat­ing for companies that undertake them. In fact, the longer that companies wait to divest their businesses [and] the more they hold on, oftentimes the more value destructio­n happens,” Wharton management professor Emilie Feldman told the Wharton Business Daily show on

SiriusXM. (Listen to the podcast above.) “My view is that companies need to use divestitur­e much more proactivel­y as a strategic tool in reshaping their corporate portfolios.”

When conglomera­tes break apart into focused companies, those offspring tend to post higher returns and have better operationa­l performanc­e because they devote all their attention and resources to a single core competence. Feldman said divestitur­es reached a “high-water mark” in 2015 and 2016, and they have continued during the pandemic. She expects the current frothy market will spur more companies to look at divestitur­e as a viable option.

“We’re really in an unpreceden­ted period right now, both from a divestitur­e and an acquisitio­n perspectiv­e,” Feldman said. “We’re seeing acquisitio­n activity right now at all-time highs. Companies DUH åQGLQJ WKH\ KDYH WKH ability to just get rid of businesses and have other companies very willing to buy them, with all of the capital that’s floating around and really low interest rates.”

‘Push to Focus’

Feldman explained why conglomera­tes form in WKH åUVW SODFH Ô DQG ZK\ they break up. The biggest reason for spawning multiple business lines is GLYHUVLåFD­WLRQ WR EDODQFH the portfolio; the profits from one business can offset losses from another. It also makes sense for conglomera­tes to grow when they make separate but related products, like Johnson & Johnson’s line of personal care products and pharmaceut­icals.

There’s also the matter of size.

“Executives like running ELJJHU FRPSDQLHV Ô QR surprise there,” Feldman said. “So that can be one of the less seemly motivation­s for these types of corporate structures as well.”

Feldman said it’s important to note that GE’s announceme­nt marks the culminatio­n of a series of divestitur­es the company has undertaken over the years to dismantle its conglomera­te structure. 7KH åQDQFH DUP ZDV VROG off, along with its legacy lightbulb business, oil and gas services, and aircraft leasing.

She said there are several ways companies can divest businesses, including selling them, spinning them off to create publicly traded companies out of the conglomera­te pieces, and entering into more complicate­d structures such as joint ventures. GE is taking the spinoff route in the current transactio­n, creating three new firms that will focus on energy, health care, and aviation.

“This is a very standard, traditiona­l push to focus. We have seen a lot of these types of transactio­ns in the past, and I would argue we are going to see them in the future as well,” Feldman said.

The ‘Circle of Life’

Feldman, who is currently writing a book about divestitur­es, said it would not be unusual for the divested businesses to get re-acquired by other companies at some later SRLQW LQ WLPH Ô SDUW RI what she calls “the circle of life” in business.

“Companies articulate this logic that there is value to be had by combining these different businesses in the same organizati­on because it makes their transactio­ns simpler, more straightfo­rward, easier to execute,” Feldman said. “Eventually, some of that logic deteriorat­es, so they separate. Then at some later point in the future, there might actually be a resurgence of the logic,” spurring new acquisitio­ns.

“Even though it’s the right [managerial] decision to remain focused, perhaps there are opportunit­ies that present themselves that change the calculus away from the right answer,” Feldman said. “This is why we end up seeing this circle of life mentality, where we have big waves of divestitur­es and big waves of acquisitio­ns, undoing and redoing these conglomera­tions of businesses over time.”

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