Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GE aircraft leasing unit, rival to merge in $30 billion deal

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

General Electric is combining its aircraft leasing business with Ireland’s AerCap Holdings in a deal valued at more than $30 billion, a big step in what has become a six-year odyssey to reshape the one-time sprawling, global conglomera­te.

By pushing GE Capital Aviation Services into a separate business, GE is essentiall­y closing the books on GE Capital, the financial wing of of General Electric that nearly sank the entire company during the 2008 financial crisis.

“Today marks GE’s transforma­tion to a more focused, simpler, and stronger industrial company,” Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Larry Culp said in a prepared statement Wednesday.

AerCap will pay about $24 billion in cash for the leasing business, and GE will take an approximat­ely 46% ownership stake in the combined company, and $1 billion paid in AerCap notes or cash at closing.

Capital Aviation Services and AerCap are two of the biggest aircraft leasers in the world with more than 2,500 aircraft between them. The companies lease commercial aircraft to hundreds of airlines around the world.

With the acquisitio­n, AerCap would own and manage

a portfolio of more than 2,000 planes, about 60% of which are narrow-body aircraft. The company would have an order book of about 500 latestgene­ration jets.

Capital Aviation Services’ more than 400 employees will transfer to AerCap.

“It is clear that we have bought the right business at the right time for the right price,” AerCap CEO Aengus Kelly said on a conference call. “And critically, we are teaming up with the right partners.”

The global pandemic sent shock waves through the entire air travel industry, and the deal announced Wednesday could have extensive ramificati­ons.

It could mean more pressure on plane manufactur- ers like Boeing and Airbus if beleaguere­d airlines choose not to buy planes. It could also mean some breathing room for airlines that are reeling from plunging air travel, if they can cut nearterm costs through leases.

A combined company would in all likelihood be able to lower its own costs, and extend them to customers.

As for GE, it said Wednesday that it will be able to lower its debt by about $30 billion, bringing total debt reduction since the end of 2018 to more than $70 billion.

In 2015, GE announced a radical transforma­tion of the company, vowing to shed billions in assets to better focus on the company’s industrial core, namely power, aviation, renewable energy and health care.

With the new company formed with Capital Aviation Services, the largest remaining operation in GE Capital, General Electric has largely excised what many industry analysts viewed as a risk. That belief existed before the financial crises that almost brought Wall Street to its knees more than a decade ago.

GE went through a series of upheavals after the crisis.

Longtime CEO Jeff Immelt, who had built GE into a huge conglomera­te that many came to believe had grown too complex, was ousted in 2017. He was replaced by John Flannery, who lasted just one year in the job.

Culp took the job in October 2018, vowing to continue the transforma­tion of GE.

“This is the right time to further accelerate our transforma­tion,” Culp said. “This action will enable us to significan­tly de-risk GE and continue on our path to being a well-capitalize­d company.”

The remainder of GE Capital, including Energy Financial Services and its run-off insurance operations, will become part of GE Corporate when the transactio­n closes.

GE gets two directors to newly created seats on AerCap’s board. The company also announced on Wednesday a reverse stock split at a ratio of 1-for-8 and a correspond­ing proportion­ate reduction in the number of authorized shares of common stock.

The deal is expected to close in nine months to a year. It still needs approval from AerCap shareholde­rs.

Shares fell 5.56% to close at $13.25 Wednesday. AerCap dropped 4.7% to $53.39. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Michelle Chapman of The Associated Press and by Ryan Beene, Julie Johnsson, Jacqueline Poh, Elizabeth Rembert and Aoife White of Bloomberg News (WPNS).

 ?? (AP) ?? The General Electric logo appears above a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in this file photo. Ireland’s AerCap Holdings is buying General Electric’s aircraft leasing business.
(AP) The General Electric logo appears above a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in this file photo. Ireland’s AerCap Holdings is buying General Electric’s aircraft leasing business.

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