Integration Expenses Continue to Eat Away at Baker Hughes, a GE Company's Earnings

Bringing Baker Hughes and General Electric's oil and gas business together under the same roof was never going to be easy. This past quarter, Baker Hughes, a GE Company (NYSE: BHGE) was forced to spend several hundred million on the integration and restructuring of the business again. Those charges put a damper on a quarter that was slightly better than the prior one, but there is still a lot of work to be done at this company.

Here's a brief rundown of the company's most recent quarterly results, how they compare to BHGE's largest rivals that also recently reported fourth-quarter earnings, and what 2018 could have in store for the oil services giant.

By the numbers

Even though BHGE beat revenue and adjusted earnings expectations this past quarter, these results weren't exactly inspiring. While revenue grew sequentially and the company narrowed its operating loss, it also reported that total orders were only up 1% compared to the prior quarter due to lower oil-field equipment and digital solutions orders. This stands in contrast to both Schlumberger (NYSE: SLB) and Halliburton (NYSE: HAL), which both reported growing revenue and improving margins despite the one-time charges related to changes in the U.S. tax code and writing down their businesses in Venezuela.

On an operating income and margins basis, this quarter was a bit of a mixed bag. BHGE saw strong growth for oil-field services and a return to profitability for oil-field equipment thanks to well construction products mostly in North America. However, much of that growth was offset by declining sales in its turbomachinery and process solutions segment. Management noted that turbomachinery is a lumpy business that has a lot of liquefied natural gas-related work in the future, but many LNG projects have not yet received the green light because of a concern of production oversupply hitting the market over the next several months.

Beyond that, BHGE took $490 million in various charges related to the merger, restructuring, and inventory impairments. Absent these charges, the company had adjusted operating income of $303 million. Cash flow was also decidedly weak this past quarter because of a large working capital build. As that working capital gets drawn down over time, it should flow back to the company as free cash flow.

What management had to say

In CEO Lorenzo Simonelli's statement accompanying the release, he discussed some of the progress management has made in integrating Baker Hughes and GE's oil and gas business into a single entity, and how he thinks the company will be able to reap the advantages of the merger in the coming year.

What a Fool believes

The integration was supposed to create a monster of a company in the oil services business, but in the first six months since the merger, BHGE has been a little slow to complete the process. Investors should give management a little slack, though, because integrating a service provider and equipment manufacturer on this scale is pretty much unheard of in this business.

The one thing BHGE has going for it is a massive cash pile. With $7 billion in cash on the books and $6.3 billion in total debt outstanding, the company has plenty of resources at its disposal to work through this integration process and still return capital to shareholders via dividends and share repurchases. Based on the statements from BHGE, Schlumberger, and Halliburton, 2018 should be a relatively good year for the oil services business. Hopefully, BHGE can get sort out its integration issues in time to take advantage of the opportunity.

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Tyler Crowe owns shares of General Electric. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.