General Electric’s slow-motion breakup with the lighting industry it pioneered continues.

GE announced on Tuesday it’s selling commercial LED maker Current to private-equity firm American Industrial Partners.

It’s the latest business that GE is saying goodbye to as it races to pay down debt by raising cash and cutting costs. GE’s (GE) debt-riddled balance sheet forced the company to slash its dividend to just a penny last week.

GE did not disclose a sale price for Current, suggesting the unit fetched an insignificant sum. The deal marks an unceremonious ending for a business that GE launched just three years ago as a next-generation energy efficiency solution for companies.

LED pricing has come under heavy pressure and Current generated just $900 million of sales during the first nine months of 2018. In addition to LED technology, Current makes sensors, controls and software for customers that include Walmart (WMT) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM). As part of the proposed sale, Current will keep using the iconic GE brand under a licensing agreement.

GE is still trying to find a buyer for its famous consumer light bulb business, which was not included in the Current sale. GE first announced plans to sell the lighting unit in mid-2017.

“GE remains actively engaged in the process to sell this business,” the company said in a statement.

GE’s financial problems — debt is too high and earnings are shrinking — have forced the conglomerate to dismantle itself in a bid to raise $20 billion.

In recent months, GE has agreed to sell its century-old locomotive division and announced plans to spin off GE Healthcare, which makes MRI machines. GE also reiterated plans last week to eventually exit its majority stake in the oil-and-gas giant Baker Hughes.

And on Tuesday, GE finalized the $3.25 billion sale of its distributed power business to private equity firm Advent International. The sale of the unit, which makes gas engines that are used to generate electricity in remote places, was first announced in June.

The flurry of dealmaking is a sign that new CEO Larry Culp is working hard to repair GE’s balance sheet.

Wall Street has grown frustrated with the speed of GE’s turnaround, which began under former CEO John Flannery. The stock, trading near nine-year lows, has declined nine straight days. GE has lost 45% of its value this year. That’s the third-worst performance in the entire S&P 500 and mirrors GE’s 2017 loss.