Aptiv PLC completed the separation of its Electrical Distribution Systems unit in April, installing a full management team ahead of the standalone entity's public debut. The EDS business, which manufactures wire harnesses and connection systems for global automakers, will trade independently after carrying roughly $5 billion in annual revenue under the Aptiv umbrella. The appointments arrived three weeks before the April distribution date, standard timing for spin preparedness but notable given supply-chain volatility in European and North American auto plants.
The spin follows eighteen months of preparation since Aptiv's September 2023 announcement. EDS generated $5.1 billion in 2023 revenue with operating margins near 6.2%, trailing Aptiv's retained Advanced Safety and User Experience segment by 430 basis points. Management cited structural margin pressure from labor-intensive harness assembly and exposure to legacy internal combustion platforms. The new entity inherits 22 manufacturing sites across 14 countries, with 63% of revenue tied to Europe where EV transition timelines remain uncertain. Aptiv retains the higher-margin software and active safety units, which grew 11% year-over-year in Q4 2023 compared to EDS's 2%.
The separation clarifies capital allocation for both entities but isolates EDS with cyclical headwinds. Automotive wire harness demand correlates directly with vehicle production, which J.D. Power forecasts at 15.8 million units for North America in 2025, flat against 2024. EDS's customer base skews toward traditional OEMs—Ford, Stellantis, GM—whose production schedules face UAW contract cost pressures and slower-than-expected EV adoption. The standalone company will compete against Yazaki, Sumitomo Electric, and Lear, all facing similar margin compression. Aptiv's retained businesses, meanwhile, gain balance sheet flexibility to pursue acquisitions in ADAS and software-defined vehicle platforms, where multiples remain elevated but growth visibility extends through 2027.
For allocators, the spin creates a pair trade: Aptiv as a higher-multiple play on automotive electrification and autonomy, EDS as a yield vehicle with modest multiples and restructuring optionality. The EDS entity will likely trade at 0.3-0.4x sales, consistent with peers like Lear's seating and e-systems segments. Debt allocation matters—if EDS assumes $1.5-2 billion in net debt, free cash flow will be constrained through 2026, limiting buyback capacity. Watch for the first standalone earnings call in late April or early May, where management will detail capital structure, capex plans, and any cost-reduction targets tied to footprint consolidation.
The April completion removes a two-year overhang. Aptiv shares traded at 13.2x forward earnings before the announcement, a 15% discount to the auto-tech peer group. The retained entity should re-rate toward 15-16x if Q1 bookings in ADAS meet the $24 billion lifetime value guidance from January. EDS, meanwhile, will test whether public markets reward operational improvement stories in a segment where private equity typically leads recapitalizations.