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GE Asset Management
GE Asset Management was established in 1987 under the leadership of John Samuels to consolidate the pension investments of General Electric and its...
GE Asset Management
GE Asset Management was established in 1987 under the leadership of John Samuels to consolidate the pension investments of General Electric and its subsidiaries. Later expanding to manage third-party mutual funds, GEAM functioned as the in-house institutional asset manager for one of America's largest industrial companies. It managed 401(k) assets for GE employees alongside general institutional accounts. The firm deployed capital across a broad investment platform. Its primary asset classes included US and international public equities, fixed income, private equity, and commercial real estate. GEAM ran direct real estate portfolios, notably owning and operating office buildings in major US markets, and participated in alternative investments through fund commitments and direct co-investments alongside external general partners. The geographic focus was predominantly North America, with additional exposure to European and Asian markets through its international equity mandates. At its peak prior to the 2016 sale, GEAM managed over $110 billion in assets, mostly from GE's main pension plan and its employee 401(k) program. The firm employed investment professionals across its Stamford headquarters and offices in California, Massachusetts, and Abu Dhabi. In April 2016, GE agreed to sell the business to State Street Global Advisors for roughly $485 million (per The Wall Street Journal, 2016), a transaction that closed later that year and transferred the GEAM investment team and its $100 billion in assets to State Street. The sale of GEAM represented a corporate pension de-risking trend where industrial companies shed internal money management units. By monetizing its captive asset manager, GE converted an internal cost center into saleable equity while shifting pension investment liability to an external fiduciary. This structural pivot became a model that other entities, including later spin-outs such as Safran's asset management arm, would reference in evaluating their own internal investment operations.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
1987
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Stamford
Corporate office
Stamford, CT, United States
Additional offices
Palo Alto, CA · Abu Dhabi, UAE · Newton, MA
Principals
Jack Welch
Chairman & CEO, General Electric (parent company)
John Samuels
CEO, GE Asset Management
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who ran investment decisions at GE Asset Management?
John Samuels served as the CEO of GE Asset Management from its founding in 1987 through its sale to State Street in 2016. He reported to GE's corporate leadership, including then-CEO Jack Welch and later Jeffrey Immelt. The firm's investment committees operated across distinct asset-class teams including public equities, fixed income, private investments, and real estate, each with their own senior investment professionals.
How did GE Asset Management source its deal flow?
As a captive corporate pension manager, GEAM sourced externally managed funds and direct investments through standard institutional channels — manager search, consultant recommendations, and co-investment invitations from existing general partners. GE's own industrial network in energy, healthcare, and aviation provided origination advantages for private investments in adjacent sectors, but the firm was primarily an allocator rather than an operating business investor.
Was GE Asset Management a single family office or a corporate pension manager?
GEAM was neither a family office nor a third-party asset manager. It was a wholly owned subsidiary of General Electric, functioning as the in-house money manager for GE's corporate defined-benefit pension plan and employee 401(k) retirement programs. It later launched a family of mutual funds marketed to external investors through GE's consumer brand.
What happened to GE Asset Management?
In April 2016, General Electric announced the sale of GE Asset Management to State Street Global Advisors for approximately $485 million (per The Wall Street Journal, 2016). The deal transferred roughly $100 billion in assets under management and integrated the GEAM investment team into SSGA's institutional business. The sale was completed later in 2016, and GEAM ceased to exist as an independent entity.
Did GE Asset Management invest in private equity and real estate directly?
GEAM maintained a dedicated real estate group that directly owned and operated commercial properties, primarily in the United States. For private equity, the firm operated predominantly as a limited partner committing to external funds, though it occasionally participated in direct co-investments alongside existing general partners in sectors aligned with GE's industrial base.
What was GE Asset Management's known posture on co-investments alongside external GPs?
GEAM selectively pursued co-investment opportunities alongside external private equity managers, allowing it to deploy larger pools of capital without paying management fees on those co-invested amounts. The co-investment portfolio concentrated in industrial technology, energy infrastructure, and healthcare services — sectors where GE's operating expertise gave the investment team conviction in underwriting direct exposure.
Why did General Electric sell its asset management arm?
GE's 2016 sale of GEAM reflected a broader corporate strategy under CEO Jeffrey Immelt to divest non-core financial assets and return the company to its industrial roots. Selling the captive pension manager generated immediate cash while transferring pension investment liability and operational complexity to a specialized third party, a trend that accelerated across large US corporations through the late 2010s.
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