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Aluminum coils sit in a cooling area at the Arconic Inc. manufacturing facility in Alcoa, Tenn., on Jan. 24, 2017.
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Arconic to split in two, cut dividend as new CEO sets revamp

Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg

Arconic to split in two, cut dividend as new CEO sets revamp

Arconic Inc. plans to break into two separate companies and will slash its dividend by two-thirds, marking a dramatic overhaul of the aerospace manufacturer in the wake of its failed sale to a private equity firm.

The company will separate into businesses focused on parts making and the production of aluminum sheet, Arconic said Friday in a statement as it reported fourth-quarter earnings. One of the units will be spun off, and Arconic will consider a sale of any operations that don’t fit into either of the businesses.

The sweeping plan underscores the challenges facing Arconic, which has tumbled over the past year amid operational shortfalls and volatile aluminum prices. The company aims to quell the tumult that has defined it since a 2016 split with Alcoa — a stretch that included a proxy battle with shareholder Elliott Management Corp., numerous CEO changes and a connection to a deadly apartment fire in London.

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Arconic climbed 1.2 percent to $17.89 a share at 9:35 a.m. in New York. The shares fell 30 percent over the 12 months through Thursday, compared with a 4.1 percent decline in a Standard & Poor’s index of industrial companies.

Arconic belt-tightening will hit pay, staffing and operating expenses, employees told
Kris B. Mamula
Arconic belt-tightening will hit pay, staffing and operating expenses, employees told

Under the breakup plan, Arconic will separate its Engineered Products & Forgings business and its Global Rolled Products operation. The company also cut the dividend to 2 cents a share from 6 cents as part of a cost-reduction effort.

Arconic announced the changes just weeks after backing out of sale talks with Apollo Global Management. The private equity investor had been widely expected to acquire the manufacturer after months of reports of interest from buyout firms.

“We did not receive a proposal for a full-company transaction that we believe was in the best interests of our shareholders,” Chairman and Chief Executive Officer John Plant said in the statement. “The board sees more shareholder value creation through a restructuring of the company.”

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Mr. Plant assumed the CEO role this week following the surprise ouster of Chip Blankenship, who led the company for just over a year. Mr. Plant is the company’s fourth CEO since early 2017.

The breakup plan overshadowed a solid fourth quarter for the company. Adjusted earnings rose to 33 cents a share, topping the 30-cent average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales climbed to $3.5 billion, while analysts anticipated $3.4 billion.

Arconic forecast profit of $1.55 to $1.65 a share for this year, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $1.58. Sales were projected at $14.3 billion to $14.6 billion.

Arconic becomes the latest industrial company to split as investors pressure multi-business operations to maximize shareholder value. General Electric Co. is unloading its transportation unit, spinning off its health care business and selling a stake in Baker Hughes, while United Technologies Corp. is separating its three primary divisions into standalone outfits.

alcoa, arconic logo, color alco_arconic_logo.JPG Libercus Media Files Library, Business desk
Patricia Sabatini
Say hello to Howmet Aerospace once Arconic splits

Arconic isn’t new to this. The company split from aluminum producer Alcoa more than two years ago as the culmination of a strategy pursued by then-CEO Klaus Kleinfeld.

Alcoa has gained about 19 percent since the separation while Arconic has fallen about 6.5 percent — not exactly what investors had in mind for the maker of higher-margin engineered aluminum parts.

In the months after the split, activist investor Paul Singer’s Elliott Management launched a campaign to replace Mr. Kleinfeld for “years of poor performance,” saying that “a culture of grandiose rhetoric devoid of any real substance or follow-through has been tolerated.”

Mr. Kleinfeld unceremoniously left his post at Arconic after he sent a rogue response to challenge Mr. Singer following weeks of hostilities.

First Published: February 8, 2019, 10:36 p.m.

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Aluminum coils sit in a cooling area at the Arconic Inc. manufacturing facility in Alcoa, Tenn., on Jan. 24, 2017.  (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)
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