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Baker Hughes sells Waygate unit to Hexagon for about $1.45 billion (updated)

Rewrites throughout, adds shares and analyst comment in paragraphs 8,9,10

By Pooja  Menon and Gnaneshwar Rajan

April 13 (Reuters) - Baker Hughes BKR.O said on Monday it will sell its unit, Waygate Technologies, to Sweden-based Hexagon HEXAb.ST for about $1.45 billion in cash, as the oilfield services provider reorganizes its business to focus on high-growth areas.

The deal is part of Baker Hughes' efforts to reshape its business by shedding non-core assets and shifting focus away from traditional oilfield services, while investing in cleaner energy solutions and expanding its presence in the natural gas sector.

"By sharpening our focus on our core strengths... we are strategically positioning Baker Hughes to deliver higher returns while accelerating investment in high-growth areas that are aligned with our long-term vision," said Baker Hughes CEO Lorenzo Simonelli.

Hürth, Germany-based Waygate provides industrial testing and inspection equipment, and is part of Baker Hughes' Industrial & Energy Technology segment.

Waygate's sale to the Swedish industrial technology group is expected to close in the second half of this year, Baker Hughes said.

Last year, Baker Hughes decided to sell its precision sensors and instrumentation product line to aerospace and defense parts manufacturer Crane CR.N for $1.15 billion and sold 65% of its surface pressure control business to a unit of equipment maker Cactus WHD.N.

The company agreed in 2025 to buy Chart Industries GTLS.N in a $13.6 billion all-cash deal to leverage its industrial and energy technology portfolio, topping a previously-agreed merger offer that Chart struck with rival Flowserve FLS.N.

Since 2022, Baker Hughes has strategically divested nearly $2 billion of IET assets, The Zephirin Group's Longdley Zéphirin said.

"While these disposals may initially appear to signal retrenchment, we view them as a deliberate portfolio realignment rather than a simple reduction of assets."

Shares of the Houston, Texas-based company rose 1.6% in premarket trading, tracking higher oil prices.

 (Reporting by Pooja Menon and Gnaneshwar Rajan in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu and Leroy Leo)

 ((Gnaneshwar.Rajan@thomsonreuters.com; Pooja.Menon@thomsonreuters.com))

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