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◼ LAST THING
With Bloomberg Opinion
By Brooke Sutherland
Another Industrial Giant
May Break Up
What do garbage disposals have in
commonwithfactoryautomationtools?
Notmuch,butEmersonElectricCo.will
gladlysellyouboth,atleastfornow.
Chief ExecutiveOfficerDavidFarr
announcedatthebeginningofOctober
thatthecompanywouldconducta com-
prehensivereviewofitsbusinessesas
it adaptsto“achallenginggeopolitical
andeconomiclandscape.”It wasper-
hapsnocoincidencethatthisannounce-
mentcamecloseontheheelsofreports
thatactivistinvestorD.E.Shaw&Co.
hasbuilta stakeinEmersonandwillpushfora breakup.
Thecompany’sstructure—ithasanautomationunitthat
sellsvalvesandmeasurementsystemsanda commercial
andresidentialdivision
thatsellsairconditioner
controls, garbage dis-
posals, andheavy-duty
vacuums—feelsobsolete
inanagewhenindustrial
conglomerates aresys-
tematicallydismantling
themselvesinthename
ofgreaterfocus.
After 19 yearsatthe
helm,Farrisoneofthe
longest-tenured indus-
trialCEOs.Accordingto
analysts, he’s signaled
$73
● MIDDLING RETURNS
That potential payoff, an average of
three analyst estimates, isn’t that
attractive stacked against the cost
and time entailed in executing a split.
● SUM OF ITS PARTS
Emerson’s stock should be worth
14% more than the $64 it traded for
before the breakup talk, if its main
units are valued comparably to peers.
his intention to retire in fiscal 2021 or
2022 and would prefer to leave any
decision on a breakup to his successor.
Butthemanufacturingeconomyhas
softened,draggingdown Emerson’s
growthandimperiling its earnings tar-
gets. The company warned in August
that customers had pushed $350 mil-
lion of projects planned for 2019 to
next year and delayed $450 million of
2020 projects until 2021. With that back-
drop and an activist investor knock-
ing, Farr may no longer be in a position
to prolong a decision on a split, even if the eventual pay-
off for investors doesn’t look that compelling on paper.
People familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News
that D.E. Shaw believes each piece of Emerson could find
a buyer, which could boost the ultimate returns. With spec-
ulation of consolidation in the heating and air conditioning
market rampant of late, there’s likely to be ample interest
in Emerson’s assets in the industry. The myriad other busi-
nesses that get lumped into the commercial division could
find a home with private equity. Meanwhile, should the
automation business become unencumbered and poten-
tially in need of a CEO in the near term, it could pique the
interest of Rockwell Automation Inc. head Blake Moret.
Rockwell rebuffed an Emerson takeover approach in 2017.
Emerson has seen some significant overhauls in its
129-year history. For better or worse, it seems headed
toward another. <BW> �Sutherland is a deals columnist for
Bloomberg Opinion