GKN unveils plans to sell off parts of its business

GKN is planning to sell off parts of its business to fund a £2.5 billion payout to shareholders as it fights off a £7.4 billion hostile takeover bid by Melrose.
Library image of the headquarters of GKN     Photo: David Davies/PA WireLibrary image of the headquarters of GKN     Photo: David Davies/PA Wire
Library image of the headquarters of GKN Photo: David Davies/PA Wire

The engineering giant said it will make the payouts over the next three years, with a “significant part” of that cash raised by offloading a number of its non-core operations over the next 12 to 18 months.

That will include the sale of its Powder Metallurgy business which reports say could be valued at more than £2 billion.

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There are expected to be “minimal job losses” as the programme gets under way, according to GKN’s market announcement, “but there will be an adjustment in working practices required to adopt the leading edge technologies”.

It is unclear how many of GKN’s 5,500 UK workers may be affected. The company employs around 55,000 staff worldwide.

GKN is also launching a dividend policy aiming to pay out 50 per cent of its free cash flow between 2018 and 2020, and said it will introduce “distinct strategies”and “focused performance targets” for its different business segments to help deliver a recurring annual cash benefit of £340 million from 2020.

GKN chief executive Anne Stevens said: “The new strategy brings clarity, accountability and focus to GKN’s world-class businesses and will allow the group to attain world-class financial performance.

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“GKN has great technologies and great people. We have strong market positions and have delivered good growth, with management revenues last year of over £10 billon.

“But too often we pursued growth at the expense of returns, this will no longer be the case. The new strategy brings discipline, both financial and operational. We have a plan and we are dedicated to delivering it.”

GKN shares were up 1% or 4.1p at 402.1p in morning trading.

The plan is the result of a “wide-ranging and strategic” review of the business that was launched last month after the company was approached by turnaround specialist Melrose.

Melrose swooped on GKN after profit warnings in October and November following problems at its US aerospace division sent shares tumbling, which sparked a battle as GKN’s board rejected its overtures.

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A spokeswoman for Melrose criticised its takeover target’s strategic plan.

She said: “GKN’s document this morning is long on adjectives and promises but desperately short on detail.

“It is a stark admission of management failure combined with a series of promises which fall well short of what Melrose is proposing,” the spokeswoman said.

“Today’s ‘killer fact’ is that GKN is waving the prospect of a £2.5 billion cash return to shareholders ‘over the next three years’ funded mostly by a sale of Powder Metallurgy.

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“Melrose has already added £1.3 billion to the value of GKN and proposes a further £1.4 billion on Day One.

“We would keep Powder Metallurgy for further improvement and use our proven skills to transform the core businesses of GKN while delivering growth and shareholder return at the fast-growing Nortek. In terms of value, the two proposals are worlds apart.”

GKN makes parts for the Boeing 737 jet, the Black Hawk helicopter and components for Volkswagen and Ford cars.