General Electric announced another steep dividend cut on Tuesday amid continued losses and disclosed that US authorities had broadened an investigation into its accounting.
GE reported a third-quarter loss of $22.8 billion following a massive downgrade in the value of key assets held by the ailing industrial giant, a move that sparked new scrutiny by US officials.
Chief Executive H. Lawrence Culp, who was tapped earlier this month to try to lead a recovery, also announced a plan to split up the troubled power division and signaled that a turnaround in would take time.
Investors have been hopeful that Culp, an outsider to GE as the former chief executive of the conglomerate Danaher, will change the company’s fortunes and shares initially rose in pre-market trading after the results were released.
But the stock price retreated after Chief Financial Officer Jamie Miller disclosed on the conference call that the US Securities and Exchange Commission had expanded an ongoing investigation into the company’s accounting.
That includes the latest $22 billion charge, the bulk of which concerns GE’s 2015 purchase of power assets from French company Alstom.
The Department of Justice is also probing the matter, Miller said.
GE slashed the quarterly dividend to just a penny from the current level of 12 cents. It had been 24 cents prior to a November 2017 cut.
The loss in the latest quarter compares with profits of $1.3 billion in the year-ago period and is due to a $22 billion write-down announced when Culp’s surprise appointment was unveiled on October 1.
Culp said the latest steps were key to his effort to get a grip on the century-old company’s struggles.
“This is a strong company,” Culp said on a conference call with analysts. “We can do better but this is an important company and I’m pleased to be on the team.”
“Everything is on the table” with respect to the power business, he added.
There was better news in the company’s revenues, which fell 3.6 percent $29.6 billion, due in part to a big drop in power, but were higher in most of GE’s other segments.
Aviation and health care, two businesses that have held up well in recent years, posted gains. And revenues also increased in oil and gas, a division that had sputtered until recently.
Culp said one of his objectives is “wring out the undo optimism” around the power business “so we can establish a baseline we can build on.”
Shares of GE, which was bumped from the prestigious Dow index earlier this year, slumped to nine-year low and were at $9.88, down 11.4 per cent in early afternoon trading.
CFRA Research analyst Jim Corridore said the drop was due to an exodus of shareholders who kept GE because of the dividend and because of the federal probes.
“Anytime you see an investigation like that by both the SEC and the DOJ it starts to make you wonder, what’s going on in their accounting? Are their books clean?” Corridore said.
GE’s big problem continues to be the power division, which has been beset by overcapacity due in part to the growth of renewable energy sources that has dented demand for GE’s turbines.
GE has described the weak market conditions in power as a multi-year issue and signalled again on Tuesday that demand remained poor.
GE reported a third-quarter loss of $22.8 billion following a massive downgrade in the value of key assets held by the ailing industrial giant, a move that sparked new scrutiny by US officials.
Chief Executive H. Lawrence Culp, who was tapped earlier this month to try to lead a recovery, also announced a plan to split up the troubled power division and signaled that a turnaround in would take time.
Investors have been hopeful that Culp, an outsider to GE as the former chief executive of the conglomerate Danaher, will change the company’s fortunes and shares initially rose in pre-market trading after the results were released.
But the stock price retreated after Chief Financial Officer Jamie Miller disclosed on the conference call that the US Securities and Exchange Commission had expanded an ongoing investigation into the company’s accounting.
That includes the latest $22 billion charge, the bulk of which concerns GE’s 2015 purchase of power assets from French company Alstom.
The Department of Justice is also probing the matter, Miller said.
GE slashed the quarterly dividend to just a penny from the current level of 12 cents. It had been 24 cents prior to a November 2017 cut.
The loss in the latest quarter compares with profits of $1.3 billion in the year-ago period and is due to a $22 billion write-down announced when Culp’s surprise appointment was unveiled on October 1.
Culp said the latest steps were key to his effort to get a grip on the century-old company’s struggles.
“This is a strong company,” Culp said on a conference call with analysts. “We can do better but this is an important company and I’m pleased to be on the team.”
“Everything is on the table” with respect to the power business, he added.
There was better news in the company’s revenues, which fell 3.6 percent $29.6 billion, due in part to a big drop in power, but were higher in most of GE’s other segments.
Aviation and health care, two businesses that have held up well in recent years, posted gains. And revenues also increased in oil and gas, a division that had sputtered until recently.
Culp said one of his objectives is “wring out the undo optimism” around the power business “so we can establish a baseline we can build on.”
Shares of GE, which was bumped from the prestigious Dow index earlier this year, slumped to nine-year low and were at $9.88, down 11.4 per cent in early afternoon trading.
CFRA Research analyst Jim Corridore said the drop was due to an exodus of shareholders who kept GE because of the dividend and because of the federal probes.
“Anytime you see an investigation like that by both the SEC and the DOJ it starts to make you wonder, what’s going on in their accounting? Are their books clean?” Corridore said.
GE’s big problem continues to be the power division, which has been beset by overcapacity due in part to the growth of renewable energy sources that has dented demand for GE’s turbines.
GE has described the weak market conditions in power as a multi-year issue and signalled again on Tuesday that demand remained poor.