GE slashes quarterly dividend ahead of expected
restructuring
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[November 13, 2017]
By Alwyn Scott and Ankit Ajmera
(Reuters) - General Electric Co
chopped its quarterly dividend in half on Monday, new Chief Executive
John Flannery's first move in an overhaul of the conglomerate he is due
to announce later in the day.
GE cut the dividend to 12 cents per share from 24 cents starting in
December, which is expected to save the company about $4 billion in cash
annually.
Its shares were up 0.7 percent at $20.64 in premarket trading. The stock
is the worst performing Dow component this year, down 35 percent through
Friday's close.
Flannery plans to focus on three of GE's biggest business lines -
aviation, power and healthcare - the Wall Street Journal reported
earlier on Monday, citing a person familiar with the matter.
Investors gathering in New York to hear Flannery's presentation told
Reuters that GE's plan as outlined so far was largely as expected, but
left open the question of how the company will generate the cash flow
that it has failed to deliver in recent years.
GE will provide details about its business and strategy at an investor
presentation at 9 a.m. (1400 GMT).
Flannery's strategy is a turning point for the company, which over
several decades built itself into a sprawling conglomerate with
interests across media, energy, banking, aviation, railroads, marine
engines and chemicals.
The move to make GE smaller and nimbler would be a turnaround from the
previous multi-business approach taken by former CEOs Jack Welch and
Jeff Immelt.
Flannery's changes would repudiate much of Immelt's vision of a "digital
industrial" company that builds software to manage and optimize GE's jet
engines, power plants, locomotives and other products.
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The ticker and logo for General Electric Co. is displayed on a
screen at the post where it's traded on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., June 30, 2016.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Conglomerates are out of favor on Wall Street, where investors prefer to bet on
specific industries rather than a mixed portfolio.
GE executives have said that analysts have undervalued the company's digital
business. They argue the digital units should be valued more like Amazon.com Inc
<AMZN.O>, Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O> Google and other fast-growing tech companies.
Analysts have disagreed about GE's value.
Scott Davis at Melius Research said GE's parts are worth about $31 per share,
based on projected 2020 earnings. But Stephen Tusa at JPMorgan pegged the value
of the parts at about $17 per share, based on 2018 financial estimates and lower
valuations for units including power, renewable energy and transportation.
GE's move to cut its dividend is the third time in its 125-year history and is a
desperate bid to save cash when the company's cash flow is deteriorating.
The other two cuts came during the Great Depression and the global financial
crisis of 2007-2009.
"We are focused on driving total shareholder return and believe this is the
right decision to align our dividend payout to cash flow generation," Flannery
said in a statement.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott in New York and Ankit Ajmera in Bengaluru; Editing by
Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
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