Bloomberg
General Electric Co. plunged the most in nine years after the company disclosed an expanded federal accounting probe and worsening troubles at its ailing power business.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is widening its investigation of the company’s accounting to look at a $22 billion charge in the power-equipment unit, the company said as it reported earnings for the first time since Chief Executive Officer Larry Culp took over. The Justice Department is also examining the writedown, which GE revealed on October 1, when it announced that Culp would replace John Flannery.
The federal investigations pile pressure on GE, which already was contending with one of the deepest slumps in its 126-year history amid cash-flow shortfalls and declining demand for its gas turbines. The announcement about probes, made during an earnings call with analysts, overshadowed Culp’s first steps in his turnaround plan: a reorganisation of the power division and a deep cut to its quarterly dividend that all but wipes out the payout.
The shares tumbled 8.8 percent to $10.18 at the close in New York, marking the biggest drop since March 2009 and reaching its lowest price since April of that year. GE had already plunged 36 percent this year. Culp’s appointment sparked a mini-rally earlier this month that has since evaporated.
CRIMINAL POTENTIAL
The Justice Department’s involvement was particularly worrisome. “It’s just stepping up the seriousness of it,’’ said Holly Froum, a legal analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “The SEC can file civil charges, but the DOJ can file criminal charges.’’
GE said in January that the SEC was looking at accounting in the power division and an old insurance portfolio that prompted a $6.2 billion charge. It also quantified a writedown in the power unit this month that was related to goodwill impairment.
“When there’s new investigations from the SEC and the Department of Justice, that’s just not the stuff that you can build much of an investment case around in the near term,’’ Jeffrey Sprague, an analyst at Vertical Research Partners, said in a Bloomberg TV interview. Sprague also noted that the company
didn’t deliver any guidance on earnings or cash-flow.
The power unit has grappled with falling demand for gas turbines, declining market share and, recently, technical problems. The Boston-based company in September disclosed that its flagship turbine was facing an oxidation issue that forced a customer to temporarily shut down two US power plants. Analysts had been bracing for a writedown after Flannery acknowledged that power assets acquired from Alstom SA in 2015 weren’t performing up to expectations. The previous CEO, Jeffrey Immelt, pushed through the $10 billion deal just as the market started to sour. The operation’s third-quarter sales plunged 33 percent.
‘DEEPER IMPACT’
The power unit’s difficulties will “persist longer and with deeper impact than expected,†Chief Financial Officer Jamie Miller said on a conference call. As a result, GE will miss its full-year target for cash flow by a significant amount, she said.
Culp is attempting to accelerate a turnaround plan centered on cost cuts and a more-focused portfolio of manufacturing businesses. The company said it would cut the dividend to just a penny a share from 12 cents currently. Debt investors at first applauded the dividend cut, expecting that the $3.9 billion it would save could help pay down about $115 billion in debt. But GE’s bonds reversed earlier gains. Its 4.418 percent bonds due 2035, the most actively traded in the investment-grade market, fell almost a cent to a record low of 89.312 cents on the dollar, according to Trace bond-price data.
While the dividend cut was a blow to investors, it wasn’t unexpected. Flannery had suggested a reduction was likely, following a separation of the health-care unit in another year. Many analysts had predicted the move would come sooner once Culp was ushered in.