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General ElectricGEDON'T BUYDec 15, 2016Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 18, 2026. Market Open.
Pure play on aerospace powerhouse. Chart shows volatility, but sideways trading shows potential to move to the upside.
Sells an engine once, but generates decades of high-margin service revenue. Service backlog continues to build, giving it highly visible recurring revenue and cashflow. Concerns about economic slowdowns, but airlines are extending life of existing fleets (that means more maintenance, not less). Ranks 7/10 for her. Yield is 0.66%.
Now a pure-play aircraft engine market leader. Sees it still dominating the jet engine market. Value score of 3/10. Analysts still see ~15% upside. Technically, looks to be trying to break out above $170; if it goes higher, could see a bit of a breakout.
Looks to be hitting a ceiling. Great run, aerospace is an exceptional business. Hold in short term and take some profits soon.
Tremendous run over the last couple of years, so you need to be careful. You don't necessarily need to sell, but you need to be prudent by rebalancing and getting back to a level of risk you're comfortable with. Stick with the winners, and this one is. Still positive on it, but make sure you're not over-exposed.
Not a stock he is interested in. When he screens his 7000 global stocks, he whittles the list down to about 165 companies that are generating consistent free cash flow. This gives them the financial flexibility where they can continue to grow and innovate. GE’s free cash flow has been declining at a huge rate, partly because of the spinoff of the credit business they had. As far as investors are concerned, this is very slow on the uptake. Prefers others such as Littelfuse (LFUS-Q).