United Tech to Break Itself Into Three Companies -- Update
November 26 2018 - 6:28PM
Dow Jones News
By Dana Mattioli and Thomas Gryta
United Technologies Corp. has decided to separate itself into
three independent companies, breaking apart one of America's last
industrial conglomerates.
The company, which makes everything from Otis escalators to
Pratt & Whitney jet engines, said Monday that it plans to spin
off to shareholders its Otis division and Carrier building systems
businesses. The Wall Street Journal had earlier reported on the
plans to break apart.
The separation is expected to be completed in 2020 and leave UTC
as a pure-play aerospace company, following its acquisition of
airplane-parts maker Rockwell Collins Inc. That $23 billion
cash-and-stock deal closed Monday after lengthy antitrust reviews
in the U.S. and China.
The company's current leader, Greg Hayes, will say on as UTC's
CEO and chairman following the separation. The company didn't name
the leaders of the Otis and Carrier spinoffs.
The breakup comes as investors are pressuring traditional
conglomerates to justify their existence.
One of UTC's biggest rivals, General Electric Co., is
essentially breaking itself apart after 126 years. Several activist
investors have been pushing UTC to split, and Mr. Hayes has openly
expressed his preference for smaller, more focused companies.
United Technologies has outperformed the broader market in the
last year, with a 9.5% rise in its shares, while GE has lost almost
60% on troubles in its power business and financial services
arm.
GE was once several times the size of UTC, but the combined
market value of UTC and Rockwell Collins is now almost twice GE's
market value.
The Farmington, Conn., company has a market value of $103
billion and has expanded over the years by swallowing other
players. Before the Rockwell deal, UTC's revenue was about evenly
split between airplanes and buildings.
UTC said its newly merged aerospace business would have had
about $39 billion in revenue last year.
The Otis business had $12.3 billion in 2017 sales, while Carrier
had $17.8 billion. For 2018, UTC has forecast companywide revenue
of about $65 billion.
United Technologies was formed in 1934, but it expanded beyond
its aerospace roots in the 1970s by acquiring Otis Elevator Co.,
which pioneered the elevator business, and Carrier Engineering Co.,
a large manufacturer of heating and air conditioning systems.
The company got embroiled in national politics in 2016 after
then-presidential candidate Donald Trump criticized its decision to
close a Carrier factory in Indiana and move production to Mexico.
After Indiana offered financial incentives, Mr. Hayes agreed to
keep some of the jobs at the factory.
UTC said the three companies are expected to pay an annual
dividend of at least $2.94, the amount currently paid by the parent
company.
Write to Dana Mattioli at dana.mattioli@wsj.com and Thomas Gryta
at thomas.gryta@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 26, 2018 19:13 ET (00:13 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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