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Monday, October 1, 2018

=General Electric (GE) : H. Lawrence Culp, Jr. will replace John Flannery as CEO



General Electric names H. Lawrence Culp, Jr. as CEO and Chairman 
  • Additionally, the GE Board has appointed Thomas W. Horton as Lead Director. Mr. Culp and Mr. Horton have been members of the Board since April 2018. Mr. Culp will succeed John Flannery as Chairman and CEO.
  • Mr. Culp, 55, served as Chief Executive Officer and President of Danaher Corporation from 2000 to 2014.
  • While GE's businesses other than Power are generally performing consistently with previous guidance, due to weaker performance in the GE Power business, the Company will fall short of previously indicated guidance for free cash flow and EPS for 2018. In addition, GE expects to take a non-cash goodwill impairment charge related to the GE Power business. GE Power's current goodwill balance is approximately $23 billion and the goodwill impairment charge is likely to constitute substantially all of this balance. The impairment charge is not yet finalized and remains subject to review. The Company will provide additional commentary when it reports third quarter results.
BOSTON (AP) -- After less than two years and a precipitous decline at General Electric, John Flannery has been ousted as chairman and CEO at the century-old company.
Flannery took over for longtime CEO Jeff Immelt in June 2017 with the company trying to re-establish its industrial roots, albeit a high-tech version of itself.
However, as Flannery has restructured the multinational conglomerate, its value has dipped below $100 billion and shares are down more than 35 percent this year, following a 45 percent decline in 2017.
It has not gotten any better.
The company was booted from the Dow Jones Industrial Average this summer and last month, shares tumbled to a nine-year low after revealing that is marquee gas turbine was flawed, an 'oxidation issue," forcing the shutdown of a pair of power plants where they were in use.
GE warned Monday that it will miss its profit forecasts this year and it's taking a $23 billion charge related to its power business.
The company said Monday that H. Lawrence Culp Jr. will take over as chairman and CEO immediately. The 55-year-old Culp was CEO and president of Danaher Corp. from 2000 to 2014. During that time, Danaher's market capitalization and revenues grew five-fold. He's already a member of GE's board.
That's a track record that GE, after 18 months of punishing declines, is hungry for.
The turnaround effort under Flannery does not appear to have gained the momentum desired by the board.
Just six months after taking over as CEO, Flannery said the company would be forced to pay $15 billion to make up for the miscalculations of an insurance subsidiary. While Wall Street was aware of the issues at GE's North American Life & Health, the size of the hit caught many off guard.
Flannery on the same day said that GE might take the radical step of splitting up the main company's three main components — aviation, health care and power — into separate businesses.
In June GE said it would spin off its health-care business and sell its interest in Baker Hughes, a massive oil services company. It's been selling off assets and trying to sharpen its focus since the recession, when it's finance division was hammered.
Flannery vowed to give GE more of a high-tech and industrial focus by honing in on aviation, power and renewable energy — businesses with big growth potential. The shift is historic for a company that defined the phrase "household name."
GE traces its roots to Thomas Edison and the invention of the light bulb, and the company grew with the American economy. At the start of the global financial crisis in 2008, it was one of the nation's biggest lenders, its appliances were sold by the millions to homeowners around the world and it oversaw a multinational media powerhouse including NBC television.
But the economic crises revealed how unwieldy General Electric had become, with broad exposure damage during economic downturns.
Shares of General Electric Co., based in Boston, surged 14 percent before the opening bell.

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