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Non-Tech : General Electric (GE) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James F. Hopkins who wrote (1526)10/23/2000 7:02:56 PM
From: Captain Jack  Respond to of 3256
 
Jim, IMO you are correct,, there is nothing that gets past Welch. He allowed UTX to set the price and just topped it. There certainly is some short action but 70+mil vs an avg 15 mil shares daily indicates some institutional bailing IMO. There are not that many shorts or mom & pops in the world. Not only drift lower but stay there until well past Feb when the deal may go through.. still pissed..
NEW YORK, Oct 23, 2000 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- The battle for Honeywell
International Inc. began just before the closing bell last Thursday when General
Electric Co. chairman John F. Welch glanced up from the trading floor of the New
York Stock Exchange to study the electronic ticker.

"I saw Honeywell go past up 10 points, and I damn near dropped," Welch said
Monday.

Welch's realization that Honeywell was about to be sold to rival United
Technologies Corp. set in motion one of the most frenzied weekends of his
storied career, a headlong rush into corporate matrimony that swamped his
well-scripted plans to retire.

"I've spent more time with Jack in the last 72 hours then I've spent with my
wife," Honeywell chairman and chief executive Michael R. Bonsignore said Monday
as he and a hoarse but still voluble Welch talked up the $42 billion deal, one
of the biggest industrial takeovers ever.

The two men, sitting side-by-side in director's chairs on the soundstage that
usually hosts "Saturday Night Live," spoke so fondly of the merger it's seemed
wondrous the deal hadn't happened sooner.

About 90 percent of GE businesses overlap with Honeywell's, yet there are few,
if any overlaps in products, Welch said. The combination will strengthen GE's
businesses across the board, and allow it to cull the best of Honeywell's work
force, he said.

"We could've sat there and not done anything," to go after Honeywell, Welch
said. "But we decided we had to and we did."

The boards of GE and Honeywell approved the deal Sunday, ending a chaotic
weekend of negotiations that left little time for corporate pleasantries, Welch
and Bonsignore said.

Welch happened to be at the stock exchange Thursday for the first day of trading
in Wipro, an Indian software firm in which GE has a stake. But he began calling
advisors that night after he heard about the UT-Honeywell deal. By midmorning
Friday, GE executives had put together an offer and were scrambling to get
through to Bonsignore.

By day's end Friday, with UT executives withdrawing an offer reportedly worth
$40 billion that had been in the works for weeks, negotiations between GE and
Honeywell were rolling. By day's end Saturday, they'd progressed far enough that
Welch stuck by his plans to go to the opening game of the World Series.

But it was too late to go by limousine, so he took his first ride ever on the D
subway line in a rush to get to Yankee Stadium, Welch said. The game went on
until after 1 a.m. Sunday, but later that morning the executives were back at
the negotiating table.

Those negotiations included a focus on the status of Welch, who had already
announced plans to retire this coming April. If there was to be a merged
company, though, it almost certainly would have to include Welch, Bonsignore
said.

"Without a commitment from Jack to stay aboard during this critical period of
integration, I think there would've been a high level of nervousness" among
Honeywell's board members, he said.

Welch, already planning his retirement, had just signed a lease for a private
office in Shelton, Conn. last week. But the deal was too good to pass up and
with his experience in putting companies together, it made sense for him to
stick around, Welch said.

It had nothing at all to do with a reluctance to step aside, he added. "This is
not a story of the old fool who can't leave his seat."

GE will pay 1.055 of its shares for each of Honeywell's 801 million outstanding
shares.

Shares of GE fell $2.52 to $49.98 in trading Monday on the New York Stock
Exchange, pushing the value of the deal down from its initial price of $45
billion, while shares of Honeywell rose $2.75 to $49.75. Both companies are part
of the 30-component Dow Jones industrial average.

Under terms of the deal, expected to close in February, GE will also assume an
unspecified amount of Honeywell debt. Honeywell's corporate headquarters in
Morristown, N.J., will be closed as part of the deal and about 550 employees
there may lose their jobs, said Honeywell spokesman Tom Crane.

Welch made clear that the deal will result in other job cuts, but refused to
talk specifics. GE employs about 340,000 people, while Honeywell has about
120,000 on its payroll.

GE is a diversified company that produces power plant parts, aircraft engines,
appliances and owns the NBC television network. Honeywell manufactures equipment
for aerospace systems, power generation, transportation and factory automation,
as well as specialty chemicals, plastics, fibers and other industrial materials.

Overlap in some areas is expected to raise antitrust concerns among U.S. and
European regulators, who could require the combined company to divest some of
its businesses as a condition of approval.

GE's 11th-hour offer for Honeywell surprised many given the fact that Welch, who
turns 65 next month, was expected to hand over control of the company six months
from now.

While Welch will continue to guide GE until the end of 2001, he said Monday he
still expects to name a presumed successor before the end of the year.

Welch is widely credited with transforming a company best known for making light
bulbs and appliances into an empire that includes the television network NBC. He
shook up GE's management structure and sold major business divisions, including
housewares, air conditioning and semiconductor businesses.

In his 20 years as chairman of GE, profits have risen from $1.6 billion to $10.7
billion in 1999. But Welch said the deal gives him the chance for an encore.

"I could've gone home early and been a great hero," Welch said. "I'm betting
everything, my reputation, that this makes GE a lot better and their (individual
investors') investment a lot stronger."

---

On the Net:

ge.com



To: James F. Hopkins who wrote (1526)10/23/2000 7:39:16 PM
From: Captain Jack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3256
 
Jim-- it was going UP after hours. Around 50.56 at 6:30 PM but I doubt it will open that high... or sustain it either,, but we can hope...



To: James F. Hopkins who wrote (1526)10/23/2000 9:33:31 PM
From: yard_man  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3256
 
That's silly ... shorts didn't drop the stock a few more points today and shorts didn't drop the stock on Friday either. This is a stock that is in almost all the mutual funds Jim ...