
NYSE:GE
This summary was created by AI, based on 16 opinions in the last 12 months.
GE Aerospace has received predominantly positive reviews from various experts, highlighting its strong position in the aerospace and defense sectors. The company benefits from a significant backlog in airplane orders and service revenue due to ongoing delays in the next generation of jet engines. Analysts see the aerospace engine business as robust, with significant demand leading to pricing power and long-term service contracts. The consistent growth prospects, indicated by strong earnings growth forecasts and an expanding market share, suggest that the company is well-positioned for future success. However, some experts caution that the stock might be approaching a fully valued state after substantial gains over the past year.
He has a small short in it. There was a triple whammy. Poor price momentum, valuation is still not cheap enough and it has become quite volatile. It used to be a stable stock. ROE is okay. It tells you they have too much debt. 13 times earnings. He needs to see stabilization in the business. The yield does not justify him buying it here. The real problem is that they just have not recovered from the financial side of their business.
GE is a broken stock. It’s important for an investor to forget about the price they paid for a company and decide whether it represents good value at its current price. If not, look for a better opportunity. The difference between the market and a horse race is that investors can switch to a better horse mid-race. If it comes back, he will be willing to pay a lot more for it, later, when it demonstrates a level of security. But he does not recommend it, at this level of insecurity, even at this low price.
(A Top Pick August 11, 2017. Down 45%). At its current price, he thinks this is a cheap story. Aviation has worked well for GE; energy has not. With the re-industrialization of the US, GE is likely to do better. Higher interest rates will work for GE Capital. The chart is not pretty but when you buy a marquee capital goods company, they tend to recover and the dividends come back.
They are spinning off their health care division, which is arguably their highest-growth area. They are also spinning off Baker Hughes. There will probably be a dividend cut later. She is waiting to see how the company evolves over the next 12-to-24 months before deciding whether it is a good business to invest in or not. Over the short term, it probably has more room to fall.