Possible GE sale has industry wondering.There are more questions than answers surrounding recent reports in the Wall Street Journal and New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times that General Electric Co. is in the early stages of placing its plastics business on the auction block. The parent company is reported to be seeking bids from as many as six parties, including private-equity investors and plastics firms. Coincidentally or not, the engineering-resins giant also laid off 20 employees at its corporate headquarters in Pittsfield, Mass., the same day the WSJ WSJ Wall Street Journal WSJ Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI) WSJ Web Services Journal WSJ Winston-Salem Journal (North Carolina) WSJ Wagle Street Journal (Kathmandu, Nepal blog) report was published. The key parties--including GE and Goldman Sachs The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., or simply Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) is one of the world's largest global investment banks. Goldman Sachs was founded in 1869, and is headquartered in the Lower Manhattan area of New York City at 85 Broad Street. , the investment bank hired by GE to find buyers--are mum on the subject. However, a recent statement by GE chairman Jeffrey Immelt suggests that the plastics unit is no longer seen as a high-growth profit contributor and doesn't fit GE's ambitious growth strategy. In a quarterly assessment late last year, Immelt said GE would "invest only in specialized higher-margin plastics, not the commodity plastics in its portfolio." That left it unclear whether GE would divest the entire unit, sell the pieces separately, or even keep parts such as its flagship Lexan polycarbonate A category of plastic materials used to make a myriad of products, including CDs and CD-ROMs. business and some higher-performance specialty materials like Ultem polyetherimide and its brand-new Extem TP polyimide Pronounced "poly-ih-mid." A type of plastic (a synthetic polymeric resin) originally developed by DuPont that is very durable, easy to machine and can handle very high temperatures. Polyimide is also highly insulative and does not contaminate its surroundings (does not outgas). , a super-high-heat cousin to Ultem. |
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