Industrials

GE Seals $17 Billion Deal for French Energy Firm Alstom

General_Electric_logo
Wikimedia Commons
General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE) managed to outbid its competitors, appease a socialist government and get what it wanted all at the same time Sunday. The last piece of the puzzle dropped into place when French construction company Bouygues S.A. agreed to sell a 20% stake in Alstom S.A. to the French government. Bouygues currently holds about 29% of Alstom. The government’s economy minister had made that a non-negotiable demand on GE’s bid for Alstom.

The deal is GE’s largest ever and is expected to be completed in 2015, at roughly the same time that GE completes a split-off of its GE Finance unit into a separate company called Synchrony Financial. The addition of Alstom’s turbine and other manufacturing businesses, along with the casting off of the finance business, is widely viewed as a return to GE’s roots as an industrial giant. Alstom will retain its nuclear and its high-speed train businesses, and it will acquire from GE the U.S. company’s rail-signaling business.

That is a reasonable conclusion, but it looks like only half the story. GE’s focus has been on energy, both conventional hydrocarbon-based and alternatives like wind and solar. Alstom virtually built France’s electrical power grid and the turbines that produce the country’s electricity.

GE and its CEO Jeffrey Immelt want out of the finance business, no doubt as regulation piles up and opportunities narrow. Positioning itself as a supplier of turbines for natural gas-fired power plants, coal-fired plants and wind turbines, GE is able to capture business at both ends of the transition from fossil fuels and to renewables. Immelt is betting that is where the action is going to be for the foreseeable future, and he may turn out to be clairvoyant.

Shares of GE were up about 0.3% in premarket trading Monday, at $27.5 in a 52-week range of $22.76 to $28.09.

ALSO READ: Seven States Running Out of Water

Get Ready To Retire (Sponsored)

Start by taking a quick retirement quiz from SmartAsset that will match you with up to 3 financial advisors that serve your area and beyond in 5 minutes, or less.

Each advisor has been vetted by SmartAsset and is held to a fiduciary standard to act in your best interests.

Here’s how it works:
1. Answer SmartAsset advisor match quiz
2. Review your pre-screened matches at your leisure. Check out the advisors’ profiles.
3. Speak with advisors at no cost to you. Have an introductory call on the phone or introduction in person and choose whom to work with in the future

Get started right here.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.