By Ted Mann 

General Electric Co. invited activist investor Nelson Peltz to address a gathering of its senior executives last summer, the company said Monday, an unusual engagement between an establishment company and a corporate agitator.

The speaking event which was attended by GE Chief Executive Jeffrey Immelt brought an investor known for finding value by breaking up complex corporate entities into contact with the top executives of a company whose share price continues to lag peers.

"Mr. Peltz was a guest speaker at a dinner for corporate officers as part of our regular annual officers meetings," GE spokesman Seth Martin said. GE currently has 192 senior leaders. "We always have external speakers at these meetings. This was a discussion about the markets broadly, not about GE."

The meeting was first reported by the Fox Business Network. Mr. Peltz wasn't immediately available for comment.

Activist investors are increasingly vocal with public campaigns advocating change at companies from Sotheby's and Abercrombie & Fitch Co. to Dow Chemical Co. and PepsiCo Inc., which is currently engaged in a battle with Mr. Peltz's Trian Fund Management LP.

Activists haven't publicly targeted GE which has a market capitalization of over $250 billion. GE's size and complexity have been seen as hurdles. And Mr. Immelt is actively repositioning the company in ways to satisfy investors' concerns and that could revive the company's languishing share price, which hasn't traded above $30 since the financial crisis.

GE's shares are down 9.3% this year while the broader S&P 500 index is up 0.6%.

One reason for the share performance, analysts believe, is GE's large finance arm which subjects the industrial giant to the risks of the credit industry. Last week, the company took a major step toward reducing its reliance on financial earnings, filing for a first time share sales of 20% of its North American retail finance operations, with the aim of spinning off the entire operation next year.

Mr. Immelt says GE can reduce its share of earnings coming from GE Capital, the finance arm, to 30% by the end of 2015, from nearly half today.

He has also embarked on an aggressive cost cutting program to reduce overhead and improve profit margins in his industrial businesses. The company returned $18.2 billion last year to shareholders in the form of dividends and share buybacks. GE increased its dividend 16% in 2013, the sixth increase in four years, according to its most recent proxy report.

Write to Ted Mann at ted.mann@wsj.com

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