Thread regarding General Electric Co. layoffs

GE lost billions by 'misjudging' renewables: report

Paris (AFP) - Investors in General Electric, once one of the world's most valuable companies, lost tens of billions of dollars after the Paris climate deal as it failed to adapt to the pace of the green energy transition, new analysis showed Thursday.

A report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) said GE had lost a "simply staggering" $193 billion (172 billion euros) in just three years to 2018 -- amounting to almost three quarters of its market capitalisation.

The Cleveland-based research group said GE and its principal shareholders misjudged the falling price of renewables as the world transitions to cleaner energy and suffered from a collapse of the gas turbine and thermal power construction markets.

GE assumed wrongly that demand for natural gas and coal would continue to track global economic growth," they said, accusing GE of "an epic failure of corporate governance."

The 2015 Paris accord enjoins nations to work towards limiting global temperature rises to "well below" two degrees Celsius (3.6 Farenheit) and to a harder cap of 1.5C if possible.

To do so, governments must commit to curbing greenhouse gas emissions -- the leading source of which is burning fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal for power.

As the price of renewable energy technologies such as wind and solar fell in recent years, the IEEFA said GE has been left with billions in stranded fossil fuel-related assets as cheaper alternatives curbed industry demand for coal and gas.

The company also failed to account for increasing energy efficiency, driven largely by renewables, which decoupled energy demand from global economic activity, according to the report.

In particular GE's power division, which in 2016 equated to half of the company's pre-tax profit, continued to invest in gas turbine units even as global demand fell, the report said.

"The world is transitioning away from fossil fuels -- particularly expensive imported thermal coal and gas -- into low-cost, zero-pollution domestic renewables such as wind and solar," said Tom Sanzillo, IEEFA's director of finance.

"This is where the smart money is, but GE failed to pick the trend."

A global divestment movement is underway calling on pension and hedge funds, among others, to end investment in upstream fossil fuel projects. Hundreds of institutions in control of over $6 trillion in assets have joined the initiative.

When contacted by AFP, a spokeswoman referred to comments made by CEO Larry Culp to an energy conference last month, when he acknowledged there was "a lot of self-help required" to manage the company's assets.

"Some people would suggest that the gas business is dying (and) there are certainly structural challenges afoot," Culp said.

"We just don't think gas is going to zero in the near to medium term, right? So it really puts the onus on us to continue to innovate, continue to serve."

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| 2233 views | | 12 replies (last June 8, 2019) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+ZqD3tTO

12 replies (most recent on top)

The problem is the "yes" men. They didn't have the guts to say the emperor had no clothes. But then again, what did they care. They were near retirement and knew millions in severance packages were available. In the GE land of ownership and accountability, there is none.

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Post ID: @2usb+ZqD3tTO

GE does have a solar cell team at GRC.

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Post ID: @2bhy+ZqD3tTO

Immelt strikes again

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Post ID: @2wbu+ZqD3tTO

Add to it ONE HUNDRED BILLION DOLLARS GE spent buying its own stock. A complete and total waste of precious cash.

"Both Welch and Immelt behaved as if their body odour was perfume. They believed their own hype and bought back stock and stock and more stock. Total shares repurchased were over 100 billion dollars. Just 30 billion of that money now would solve the credit rating problems."

(https://ftalphaville.ft.com/2018/02/19/1519031430000/The-buyback-backlash--GE-as-exhibit-A/)

"GE... was one of Wall Street’s major share buyback operators between 2015 and 2017; it repurchased $40 billion of shares at prices between $20 and $32. The share price is now $8.60, so the company has liquidated between $23 billion and $29 billion of its shareholders’ money on this utterly futile activity alone."

(https://www.marketwatch.com/story/misguided-share-buybacks-are-hollowing-out-companies-balance-sheets-and-will-lead-to-even-bigger-trouble-2018-11-20)

"I'm willing to bet anyone that the $46 billion GE spent over the last decade on buybacks, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices, and the $24 billion the company spent on buybacks in 2016 and 2017 alone, would be better served in its checking account, giving it more runway to restructure the company back to profitability."

(https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/11/investors-should-be-furious-3-stock-buybacks-that-went-horribly-wrong.html)

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Post ID: @2tnt+ZqD3tTO

@btc Still working, but for some niche applications. Can't/not interested to compete on a big scale with some Asian companies who pumped billions into that, not to mention Tesla.

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Post ID: @2jvs+ZqD3tTO

GE burnt 100 billion USD on pointless stock buybacks.

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Post ID: @1yfk+ZqD3tTO

No, not really into solar at all anymore, just wind. And they're not even very good at that. Between the mass gearbox failure of a few years ago and the basic bolting failures recently, GE wind turbines are a s--- show.

They really missed the boat on renewables and are now married to the dying gas turbine industry (and are bungling that too thanks to the HA incompetence).

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Post ID: @1rss+ZqD3tTO

So GE's big into solar?

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Post ID: @1exs+ZqD3tTO

This report glosses over a lot of important details. Yes, renewables are cheaper on a $/kw basis, or even an LCOE basis than they were, but that, by itself, didn’t cause GE’s problems. Minus egregious, repeated, and sustained strategic errors by the senior leadership, GE would be in much better shape today. Within GE Power, the scandal is that the people put into leadership positions didn’t even attempt to understand the market, because the market didn’t paint an attractive narrative for them. Shame on the BoD and the CEO for that.

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Post ID: @1koh+ZqD3tTO

I thought GRC was working on solar cells. What happened?

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Post ID: @btc+ZqD3tTO

https://start.att.net/news/read/category/news/article/afp-ge_lost_billions_by_misjudging_renewables_report-afp

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Post ID: @huh+ZqD3tTO

Did someone say $1.6 Billion in Cuts Coming To A Power Manufacturing Plant near you? I think the CEO did.

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Post ID: @igk+ZqD3tTO

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