Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

ARCONIC BREAKUP

Aerospace company will split in two, cut dividend as another new CEO takes over

- By Richard Clough

Arconic Inc. plans to break into two separate companies and will slash its dividend by two-thirds, marking a dramatic overhaul of the aerospace manufactur­er in the wake of its failed sale to a private equity firm.

The company will separate into businesses focused on parts making and the production of aluminum sheet, Arconic said Friday in a statement as it reported fourthquar­ter earnings. One of the units will be spun off, and Arconic will consider a sale of any operations that don’t fit into either of the businesses.

The sweeping plan underscore­s the challenges facing Arconic, which has tumbled over the past year amid operationa­l shortfalls and volatile aluminum prices. The company aims to quell the tumult that has defined it since a 2016 split with Alcoa — a stretch that included a proxy battle with shareholde­r Elliott Management Corp., numerous CEO changes and a connection to a deadly apartment fire in London.

Arconic climbed 1.2 percent to $17.89 a share at 9:35 a.m. in New York. The shares fell 30 percent over the 12 months through Thursday, compared with a 4.1 percent decline in a Standard & Poor’s index of industrial companies.

Under the breakup plan, Arconic will separate its Engineered Products & Forgings business and its Global Rolled Products operation. The company also cut the dividend to 2 cents a share from 6 cents as part of a cost-reduction effort.

Arconic announced the changes just weeks after backing out of sale talks with Apollo Global Management. The private equity investor had been widely expected to acquire the manufactur­er after months of reports of interest from buyout firms.

“We did not receive a proposal

for a full-company transactio­n that we believe was in the best interests of our shareholde­rs,” Chairman and Chief Executive Officer John Plant said in the statement. “The board sees more shareholde­r value creation through a restructur­ing of the company.”

Mr. Plant assumed the CEO role this week following the surprise ouster of Chip Blankenshi­p, who led the company for just over a year. Mr. Plant is the company’s fourth CEO since early 2017.

The breakup plan overshadow­ed a solid fourth quarter for the company. Adjusted earnings rose to 33 cents a share, topping the 30cent average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales climbed to $3.5 billion, while analysts anticipate­d $3.4 billion.

Arconic forecast profit of $1.55 to $1.65 a share for this year, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $1.58. Sales were projected at $14.3 billion to $14.6 billion.

Arconic becomes the latest industrial company to split as investors pressure multi-business operations to maximize shareholde­r value. General Electric Co. is unloading its transporta­tion unit, spinning off its health care business and selling a stake in Baker Hughes, while United Technologi­es Corp. is separating its three primary divisions into standalone outfits.

Arconic isn’t new to this. The company split from aluminum producer Alcoa more than two years ago as the culminatio­n of a strategy pursued by then-CEO Klaus Kleinfeld.

Alcoa has gained about 19 percent since the separation while Arconic has fallen about 6.5 percent — not exactly what investors had in mind for the maker of higher-margin engineered aluminum parts.

In the months after the split, activist investor Paul Singer’s Elliott Management launched a campaign to replace Mr. Kleinfeld for “years of poor performanc­e,” saying that “a culture of grandiose rhetoric devoid of any real substance or follow-through has been tolerated.”

Mr. Kleinfeld unceremoni­ously left his post at Arconic after he sent a rogue response to challenge Mr. Singer following weeks of hostilitie­s.

 ?? Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg ?? Aluminum coils sit in a cooling area at the Arconic Inc. manufactur­ing facility in Alcoa, Tenn., on Jan. 24, 2017.
Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg Aluminum coils sit in a cooling area at the Arconic Inc. manufactur­ing facility in Alcoa, Tenn., on Jan. 24, 2017.

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