Tag Archives: Larry Culp

GE Cuts Larry Culp’s 2022 Pay After Shareholder Protest

General Electric Co. said Chief Executive

Larry Culp

agreed to reduce his potential compensation by about $10 million this year, responding to shareholder concerns over changes that

GE’s

GE 0.88%

board made to executives’ pay packages in 2020.

In August 2020, the GE board revised Mr. Culp’s contract, extending it until 2024 and awarding him a special stock grant during the year that was valued at more than $100 million by the end of 2020. Asset managers called the awards poorly linked to the company’s performance, which they characterized as trailing that of GE’s peers.

Nearly 58% of GE shares were voted against the board’s compensation practices at last year’s annual meeting. It is rare for shareholders to withhold their support for such say-on-pay votes at major companies.

For 2022, Mr. Culp stands to receive a $5 million equity award, instead of the $15 million set out in his revised contract, if he and the company meet performance targets. Exceeding those targets or falling short would increase or reduce the award, respectively.

GE reduced Mr. Culp’s potential 2022 pay following discussions with most of its major shareholders last year, the company said in its annual proxy statement.

“There was shareholder concern around the timing, size and structure of the 2020 retention grant made as part of the extension,” GE said in its filing, along with shareholder support for Mr. Culp’s leadership. The company also said it doesn’t plan to make similar changes to its CEO’s pay in future years.

On Thursday, GE reported paying Mr. Culp $22.7 million for 2021, including a cash bonus of $4.2 million and salary of $2.5 million as well as a $15 million equity award. The equity award was made before the 2021 annual meeting, GE said in the filing.

His 2021 pay trailed the $73.2 million that GE reported paying him in 2020, but it roughly matched the $24.6 million paid in 2019, Mr. Culp’s first full year heading the company, securities filings show.

GE said in its proxy that the board would also limit its use of discretion when determining executive bonuses, after shareholders expressed concerns that GE used discretion in 2020 to award bonuses rather than pegging them to performance measures.

The company said Mr. Culp’s bonus for 2021 paid out at 112% of target, reflecting better-than-target free-cash-flow and margin-expansion figures, and worse-than-target revenue growth, as well as a penalty based on companywide safety metrics.

A GE spokeswoman said the company spoke with investors holding about half the company’s shares, and three-quarters of those held by institutional investors, after the failed say-on-pay vote.

Write to Theo Francis at theo.francis@wsj.com

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Appeared in the March 18, 2022, print edition as ‘GE Cuts CEO Pay After Shareholder Protest.’

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GE Nears Deal to Combine Aircraft-Leasing Unit With AerCap

General Electric Co. is nearing a $30 billion-plus deal to combine its aircraft-leasing business with Ireland’s

AerCap

AER 1.62%

Holdings NV, according to people familiar with the matter, the latest in a string of moves by the industrial conglomerate to restructure its once-sprawling operations.

Though details of how the deal would be structured couldn’t be learned, it is expected to have a valuation of more than $30 billion, some of the people said. An announcement is expected Monday, assuming the talks don’t fall apart.

The

GE

GE 0.29%

unit, known as GE Capital Aviation Services, or Gecas, is the biggest remaining piece of GE Capital, a once-sprawling lending operation that rivaled the biggest U.S. banks but nearly sank the company during the 2008 financial crisis. GE already took a major step back from the lending business in 2015 when it said it would exit the bulk of GE Capital, and a deal for Gecas would represent another big move in that direction.

It would also represent another significant move by GE Chief Executive Larry Culp to right the course of a company that has been battered in recent years by souring prospects for some of its top business lines and a structure that has fallen out of favor with investors.

With more than 1,600 aircraft owned or on order, Gecas is one of the world’s biggest jet-leasing companies, alongside AerCap and Los Angeles-based Air Lease Corp. It leases passenger aircraft made by Boeing Co. and

Airbus SE

as well as regional jets and cargo planes to customers ranging from flagship airlines to startups. Gecas had $35.86 billion in assets as of Dec. 31.

AerCap has a market value of $6.5 billion and an enterprise value—adjusted for debt and cash—of about $34 billion, according to S&P Capital IQ, and around 1,400 owned or ordered aircraft. The company has experience in deal making, paying around $7.6 billion in 2014 to buy International Lease Finance Corp. AerCap’s revenue last year was about $4.4 billion, down from around $5 billion in the previous few years.

The aviation business has been hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has resulted in a sharp drop in global travel and prompted airlines to ground planes. Some airlines have sought to defer lease payments or purchases of new aircraft. Gecas had an operating loss of $786 million on revenue of $3.95 billion in 2020. GE took a roughly $500 million write-down on the value of its aircraft portfolio in the fourth quarter.

Combining the companies could afford cost-cutting opportunities and help the new entity weather the downturn.

Separating Gecas could help GE with its efforts to shore up its balance sheet and improve cash flows. Despite a recent increase, GE’s share price remains below where it was before significant problems in the company’s power and finance units emerged in recent years.

The Boston company has a market value of around $119 billion after the shares more than doubled in the past six months as it posted improving results. Still, the stock has fallen by about three-quarters from the peak just over 20 years ago.

Mr. Culp became the first CEO from outside of GE in late 2018 after the company was forced to slash its dividend and sell off businesses. The former

Danaher Corp.

boss has sought to simplify GE’s wide-ranging conglomerate structure further, as other industrial giants such as Siemens AG and

Honeywell International Inc.

have done in recent years.

Activist investor Trian Fund Management LP, which has owned a significant position in the company since 2015 and holds a seat on its board, has supported such changes.

Early in his tenure, Mr. Culp said he had no plans to sell Gecas, a move his predecessor

John Flannery

had considered after the unit drew interest from private-equity firms pushing further into the leasing business.

Mr. Culp has sought to even out cash flows and refocus on core areas. Operations he has parted with include the company’s biotech business, which was purchased by Danaher in a $21 billion deal that closed last year. GE also sold its iconic lightbulb business in a much smaller deal last year, and previously said it was unloading its majority stake in oil-field-services firm Baker Hughes Co.

GE has cut overhead costs and jobs in its jet-engine unit while streamlining its power business. The pandemic continues to pressure the jet-engine business, GE’s largest division, however.

The company also makes healthcare machines and power-generating equipment, and the rest of GE Capital extends loans to help customers purchase its machines and contains legacy insurance assets too.

AerCap is based in Ireland and Gecas has headquarters there as well. The aircraft-leasing industry has long had a significant presence in Ireland due to the country’s favorable tax regime and the importance of Guinness Peat Aviation in the development of the sector. (A deal between GE and AerCap would reunite two companies that bought their main assets from GPA.) The industry has gotten more competitive as Chinese companies have gained market share, however, and the combination could help the new group stem that tide.

Shares in aircraft-leasing companies plummeted along with much of the market in the early days of the pandemic as demand from major airlines, who lease planes to avoid the costs of owning them, evaporated. But many of the major lessors’ stocks have recovered lost ground and then some in the months since as lockdowns ease and the outlook for travel improves.

AerCap’s Chief Executive Aengus Kelly said on its fourth-quarter earnings call this month that he expects airlines to shift more toward leasing planes as they rebuild their balance sheets, in what would be a boon to the company and its peers.

“Their appetite for deploying large amounts of scarce capital to aircraft purchases will remain muted for some time,” he said. “The priority will be to repay debt or government subsidies.”

Write to Cara Lombardo at cara.lombardo@wsj.com and Emily Glazer at emily.glazer@wsj.com

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