GE books $4.2 billion charge, restates earnings as
expected
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[April 14, 2018]
By Alwyn Scott
NEW YORK (Reuters) - General Electric Co
<GE.N> said on Friday it took a $4.24 billion equity charge and reduced
earnings for the last two years by 30 cents a share, figures in line
with expectations the company set earlier this year when it said it
would comply with new accounting standards.
The maker of power plants, jet engines, medical devices and other
industrial goods had estimated the after-tax, non-cash impact would be
about $4.2 billion, plus reduced earnings for 2016 and 2017 of about 29
cents a share.
The accounting change prompted GE to recast two years of past financial
statements to reflect lower income and asset values under the new
standard, and those will be reflected when GE reports first-quarter
results on April 20.
The value of GE's contract assets are being written down, but that does
not change the value of the long-term contracts GE has, nor does it
affect GE's cash flow or earnings estimates for 2018, GE said.
The adjustments appear within expectations, Edward Jones analyst Jeff
Windau said. "Now the focus moves to next Friday's earnings."
The figures suggest GE executives have gotten to the bottom of some
accounting issues and bolster confidence in Chief Executive Officer John
Flannery after a series of financial surprises, including
underestimating the impact of insurance policies that prompted a $6.2
billion charge in the fourth quarter, analysts said.
GE shares were down 1 percent at $13.35 in aftermarket trading after
rising 2.4 percent on Friday.
The new accounting standard governs how companies estimate and recognize
revenue from long-term contracts, and is designed to make a company's
cash flow more closely match its income, accounting experts and analysts
said.
The prior standard allowed companies to recognize future revenue from
such agreements more quickly. The new standard shifts revenue to later
in the contract duration, analysts said.
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The General Electric logo is pictured on the General Electric
offshore wind turbine plant in Montoir-de-Bretagne, near
Saint-Nazaire, western France, November 21, 2016. REUTERS/Stephane
Mahe/File Photo
Companies typically use the cost of providing services as a basis for estimating
future revenue from the contracts, but the process can lead to over- or
under-estimating the value of the contracts as assets on the balance sheet,
experts say.
GE's contract asset tally has soared 70 percent to $28.8 billion in 2017, from
$16.9 billion in 2014, most of it in its power and aviation units. The majority
of the total reflects revenue GE has already booked but for which it has not
billed customers, which creates the gap between profit and cash flow, according
to GE's regulatory filings.
GE also made adjustments for new accounting standards for pensions, cash flow
and taxes on Friday.
GE's accounting is under scrutiny after earnings swung to a loss last year and
GE said its 2018 results would be at the low end of its forecasted range of
between $1.00 and $1.07 a share.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is looking into GE's accounting for
contract assets, raising investor concern but GE has said it is not overly
concerned about the investigation.
GE said in February that it expects to make the adjustments as it switches to
the new accounting standards for contracts.
GE said it chose to restate 2016 and 2017 earnings, a more exacting standard
under the new rules, because it will allow investors to compare 2018 results
with the prior years.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Bill Rigby and Clive McKeef)
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