Khaleej Times

GE, Baker Hughes in mega merger

- Swetha Gopinath

new york — General Electric, banking on a recovery in oil prices, said on Monday it would merge its oil and gas business with No 3 oilfield services provider Baker Hughes.

GE will own 62.5 per cent of the new publicly traded company, which will have combined revenue of $32 billion, while Baker Hughes shareholde­rs will own 37.5 per cent.

Shareholde­rs of Baker Hughes, which had a market value of about $26 billion as of Friday, will get a special one-time cash dividend from GE of $17.50 per share — or a total of $7.4 billion — after the deal closes.

Baker Hughes had planned to combine with bigger rival Halliburto­n, but the transactio­n fell through in May due to opposition from regulators. That deal was valued at $34.6 billion when it was announced in November 2014.

The combinatio­n of GE Oil & Gas and Baker Hughes will create the second-largest player in the oilfield services industry in terms of revenue after Schlumberg­er.

The GE-Baker Hughes deal comes at a time when North American oil and gas producers are putting rigs back to work after a near freeze in activity caused by a slump in oil prices that began mid-2014. Global oil prices have risen by a third this year to trade near $50 a barrel.

GE said last week it believed the oil market had bottomed, but that demand for the gear the company makes would take longer to recover, probably until after the first half of next year.

GE’s oil and gas business, which makes blowout preventers, pumps and compressor­s used in exploratio­n and production, accounted for 14 per cent of the company’s total revenue in 2015.

Baker Hughes supplies a variety of oilfield services, products, technology and systems. “This transactio­n creates an industry leader, one that is ideally positioned to grow in any market,” GE chief executive Jeff Immelt said. “Oil and gas customers demand more productive solutions. This can only be achieved through technical innovation and service execution, the hallmarks of GE and Baker Hughes.”

Lorenzo Simonelli, chief executive and president of GE Oil & Gas, will be CEO of the new company. Immelt will be chairman and Baker Hughes CEO Martin Craighead will be vice-chairman.

The companies said on Monday the deal was expected to add four cents to GE’s earnings per share by 2018 and eight cents by 2020.

GE and Baker Hughes had said on Thursday they were in talks over potential partnershi­ps. The Wall Street Journal first reported that the companies were in discussion­s.

Baker Hughes shares were up 12 per cent at $66.20 in pre-market trading on Monday. The stock had closed at $54.55 on Thursday ahead of the Journal report.

GE’s shares were up 0.3 per cent at $29.32 in light trading.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? An operator for Baker Hughes works on a natural gas rig in Texas. Baker Hughes had planned to combine with bigger rival Halliburto­n, but the transactio­n fell through in May.
— Bloomberg An operator for Baker Hughes works on a natural gas rig in Texas. Baker Hughes had planned to combine with bigger rival Halliburto­n, but the transactio­n fell through in May.

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