Our Thesis Plays Out as GE Sells BioPharma to Danaher
We're still evaluating the deal, but we don't expect a change to GE's fair value estimate.
On Feb. 25, narrow-moat-rated General Electric GE announced it has agreed to sell its BioPharma business to Danaher DHR for approximately $21.4 billion, including $21 billion cash and assumption of certain pension liabilities (about 17 times forward EBITDA). We had speculated that this deal was possible as early as last year and wrote that the deal would be "approximately $20 billion at current forward enterprise value/EBITDA multiples." The GE Life Sciences unit will join Danaher’s Life Sciences as a stand-alone business. Pharmaceutical Diagnostics, which currently forms part of GE Life Sciences, will stay with the remainder of GE Healthcare. That business supplies contrast media and molecular imaging consumables for radiology customers. This carve-out clearly makes sense to us, given the synergies with the remaining GE Healthcare’s core medical imaging business. While we’re still evaluating the full impact of this transaction, mostly as to timing, we’re not overly surprised by the deal and don’t expect to materially change our GE fair value estimate of $13.80 per share.
Danaher had expressed interest in this business as early as the spring of 2018, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. At the time, however, GE was reportedly not interested in pursuing a deal. While GE is losing one of its bright stars that typically increases its top line at a high-single-digit year-over-year clip, we think CEO Larry Culp is making the right strategic decision. First, while this deal may make the GE Healthcare initial public offering slightly less attractive, life science valuations are currently high, and this deal offers Culp and his team the opportunity to deleverage the balance sheet. Second, we believe GE Life Sciences has little strategic value to GE's future as an industrial infrastructure business.
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