Crude's woes a drag on GE

Firm bets on oil rebound after 4Q revenue misses target

Shares of General Electric Co. slumped Friday after another quarter hampered by persistent woes in the oil patch.

Weakness in the oil and gas unit, which makes drilling equipment and pipes, will probably linger into this year after an "extremely difficult" 2016, Chief Financial Officer Jeff Bornstein said during a conference call. Improvement is unlikely until the second half of 2017, he said after GE announced fourth-quarter sales that fell short of analysts' estimates.

A sluggish economy curbed GE's growth in 2016 and pressured Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt's efforts to sharpen the focus on machinery such as gas turbines and jet engines. Immelt, who sold off most consumer and financial businesses in the last two years, is looking to deepen his bet on crude by combining the oil operations with Baker Hughes Inc.

The shares fell 68 cents, or 2.2 percent, to close Friday at $30.53. GE gained 9.5 percent in the 12 months through Thursday, compared with a 20 percent advance for the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

GE is facing a "slow-growth and volatile environment," Immelt said during the conference call.

Revenue fell 2.4 percent to $33.1 billion in the quarter, the Boston-based company said in a statement. Analysts had predicted $33.9 billion, according to the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Adjusted earnings fell to 46 cents a share, matching estimates.

Orders rose 4.3 percent in the quarter. They declined slightly on an organic basis after excluding assets acquired from Alstom SA.

"I don't see any signs of big problems, but it was a grind quarter," said Nicholas Heymann, an analyst with William Blair & Co.

Investors are watching how President Donald Trump will affect GE, including the possibility of corporate tax reform that could lower the company's bill. In the fourth quarter, GE had an effective tax rate of negative 2 percent. Immelt has said GE could also benefit from new infrastructure investment and an improving business climate under Trump.

GE has met with lawmakers and policymakers to discuss what elements could be included in a tax overhaul, including a "reasonable" transition tax for companies looking to repatriate overseas cash, Bornstein said in a telephone interview. While a final package hasn't been passed, Bornstein said he is "reasonably confident there is going to be corporate tax reform."

GE hasn't included any potential benefits from tax policy changes in its earnings forecasts, Bornstein said.

While fourth-quarter sales tumbled 22 percent in the oil and gas unit, orders were flat for the period. The segment, along with GE's slumping mining business, is "bottoming now from an order perspective," Scott Davis, an analyst at Barclays PLC, said in a note. The divisions could show improvement in the second half, he said.

GE hopes to capitalize on an eventual crude oil price rebound through the deal with Baker Hughes, which would create the world's second-largest oil-field services provider and equipment-maker. GE would own 62.5 percent of the combined company.

The manufacturer also is selling two divisions, water and industrial solutions, to help fund restructuring and free up cash for potential acquisitions. Bornstein said the water unit, which makes products for desalination and wastewater treatment, has received "a lot of bids at decent valuations."

Revenue last quarter climbed 20 percent in the power division, which is shipping a new gas turbine. GE Aviation, which is increasing production of a new jet engine, posted a 6.7 percent increase.

Sales and profit across GE's industrial units were light, "although investor expectations were fairly low heading into the earnings" report, Julian Mitchell, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG, said Friday in a note.

Operating earnings in 2017 will be $1.60 to $1.70 a share, GE said, reaffirming a forecast the company gave last month. Organic revenue is expected to increase 3 percent to 5 percent.

Business on 01/21/2017

Upcoming Events