After The General Electric Breakup Announcement Is GE Stock A Buy?

 | Nov 18, 2021 09:31AM ET

After years of corporate decline and its stock underperformance, General Electric (NYSE:GE) has finally played its best card in order to win back investor confidence.

The 129 year-old Boston-based industrial conglomerate, which is in the middle of a turnaround, announced last week that it plans to split into three public companies, encompassing its healthcare, aviation and energy businesses, as part of a breakup that will unlock value for its shareholders.

GE will spin off its healthcare business in early 2023 and combine its renewable energy, fossil fuel power and digital units into a single, energy-focused entity that will be spun off a year later. The remaining business will form GE Aviation, its jet-engine division.

Chief Executive Officer Larry Culp, who took the helm in 2018 to transform the struggling industrial giant, called the announcement a “defining moment” for GE.

Culp, during the past three years, bolstered the company’s cash flows by selling major businesses, which included a $30-billion deal to sell its jet-leasing business. Its biotech business was purchased by Danaher (NYSE:DHR) in a $21-billion deal, and the sale of the bulk of the GE Capital finance arm was brokered before Culp's tenure as CEO.

GE shares closed Wednesday at $101.99. The stock price, adjusting for the split, is little changed from where it was when Culp took over in October 2018, compared with a roughly 60% gain in the S&P 500 index. Existing GE shareholders will receive new shares in the two companies after they are spun off.