Qingdao Haier, the world's biggest appliance maker took a big step on Friday towards cementing its footprint in the global market after securing the takeover of US industrial giant General Electric's (GE) appliance business.
The $5.4 billion (4.95 billion euro) deal marks one of the largest Chinese acquisitions of a US firm to date. It also illustrates just how far Haier has come from its humble days as an upstart that grew out of a close-to-broke refrigerator factory three decades ago. Today, the firm controls more than 10 percent of the global household appliance market, and raked in $32.6 billion in 2014 revenue.
The move is sure to please the Chinese government, to which Haier has close ties, which is trying to re-balance its economy more towards consumption and away from the infrastructure and investment-driven model of the past.
GE's pivot
The sale is the latest step by GE's CEO Jeff Immelt to return the 123-year-old company to its industrial roots, and refocus on advanced industry technology and manufacturing. In the past years, Immelt has offloaded a number of the units the company had accumulated since the 1990s, in fields as varied as consumer finance , media and plastics.
GE said that the sale had been green-lighted by its board of directors and Haier, but remained subject to Haier shareholder and regulatory approval.
However, Haier was not GE's first choice. Swedish rival Electrolux had all but signed a $3.3-billion deal, when it was nixed by US antitrust authorities, who worried it would hand the Stockholm-based manufacturer a US market share of some 40 percent.
Hoping to avoid a repeat, Immelt set his sights on Asia, where a buyer was considered more likely to get approval from Washington.
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