Business Day

Struggling GE kicked off Dow

• Once the biggest blue chip but now $140bn down in a year, General Electric will be replaced by consumer company Walgreens

- Agency Staff New York

General Electric (GE) suffered a crowning ignominy on Tuesday as overseers of the Dow Jones Industrial Average kicked the company out of the stock gauge it has inhabited for more than a century.

General Electric on Tuesday suffered a crowning ignominy as overseers of the Dow Jones industrial average kicked the beleaguere­d company out of the stock gauge it has inhabited for more than a century.

Once the world’s most valuable company, GE will be replaced by Walgreens Boots Alliance, the Deerfield, Illinoisba­sed drugstore chain created in a 2014 merger. The change will take effect prior to the open of trading next Tuesday.

Down 26%, GE is the worst performer in the Dow in 2018, as it was last year, as well.

“It was an issue not of if, but when,” said Quincy Krosby, the chief market strategist at Prudential Financial.

“The GE that was dominant in the Dow in the ’70s and ’80s is no longer the same GE.”

The change means the last original Dow member has finally been removed from the benchmark formed in 1896, with GE joining the likes of Distilling & Cattle Feeding, National Lead, Tennessee Coal & Iron and US Rubber. GE briefly left the index but has been in it continuous­ly since 1907.

“Since then the US economy has changed: consumer, finance, healthcare and technology companies are more prominent today and the relative importance of industrial companies is less,” said David Blitzer, MD and chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

Adding Walgreens makes the index “more representa­tive of the consumer and healthcare sectors of the US economy”.

GE has also changed. It’s lost almost $140bn of market value in the last year, spurring a plan to shed $20bn of assets in a bid to realign businesses and cut costs as the company grapples with debt challenges and flagging demand. CEO John Flannery, who took over from Jeffrey Immelt last year, said in May there is no “quick fix” to the company’s problems.

In Walgreens, the Dow gets something less than an investor darling. The stock fell in 2016 and 2017 and is down 11% since December as the chain dealt with competitiv­e pressures plaguing the retail industry. One positive was its stock price: at around $65, it will not distort the Dow, whose members are weighted on price rather than market capitalisa­tion.

The Dow’s weighting methodolog­y effectivel­y rules out inclusion of several of the largest companies in the world, among them Google parent Alphabet and Amazon.com, whose shares trade above $1,000. It may also be a mark against another technology company, Facebook, which has occasional­ly been mentioned as a Dow candidate.

Tuesday’s switch de-emphasises industrial companies in the Dow, currently the biggest industry group in the index at 23% of its value, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Walgreens is categorise­d as a consumer-staples company, a group that now only makes up 5.7% of the Dow. Healthcare companies are at 13%.

According to the index manager’s website, the Dow favours a company that “has an excellent reputation, demonstrat­es sustained growth and is of interest to a large number of investors”. It also seeks to maintain “adequate” sector representa­tion.

GE sank 45% in 2017, compared with a 25% gain in the Dow, as it struggled with weak demand for industrial products from gas turbines to locomotive­s and oilfield equipment. Its shares fell as low as $12.50 in premarket trading on Wednesday, which would be its lowest closing price since 2009.

“We are focused on executing against the plan we’ve laid out to improve GE’s performanc­e,” the company said. “Today’s announceme­nt does nothing to change those commitment­s or our focus in creating in a stronger, simpler GE.”

GE has been by far the worst in the Dow for more than a year while contending with weak demand for industrial equipment and cash-flow challenges. The troubles deepened in January with news that US securities regulators were probing the company’s accounting.

Like GE, the Dow’s importance in markets has waned as institutio­nal investors and exchange-traded funds have migrated to broader, capitalisa­tion-weighted measures such as the S&P 500. Still, according to the S&P Dow Jones Indices website, about $4.83-trillion is benchmarke­d to the gauge, with index assets making up $1.1-trillion of the total.

Nick Heymann, a William Blair & Co analyst, said GE was “still a member of the S&P 500. If it was to exit that, there would be a lot more material adjustment for profession­al portfolios.”

 ?? /Reuters ?? No quick fix: General Electric CEO John Flannery has admitted the company is in dire straits. The company, which was the last of the original set of companies on the Dow Jones industrial average, has been struggling with weak demand and debt challenges, and was the worst performer on the Dow for more than a year.
/Reuters No quick fix: General Electric CEO John Flannery has admitted the company is in dire straits. The company, which was the last of the original set of companies on the Dow Jones industrial average, has been struggling with weak demand and debt challenges, and was the worst performer on the Dow for more than a year.

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