GE shares sank 7.3 percent to $8.44 in afternoon trading, and
dropped to as low as $8.15. The stock price fell below $9 for
the first time since March 2009, during the throes of the
financial crisis.
Friday's research note from JP Morgan analyst Stephen Tusa
followed GE's third-quarter results late last month, in which
the company posted a staggering loss of $22.8 billion and said
it faced a deepening federal accounting probe.
Tusa, who has long been bearish on the stock, said out of GE's
eight reported segments, "all of which were profitable even 2
years ago, 6 are now likely either at or below zero in 2020."
"While liquidity is certainly debatable, we believe this is not
really about liquidity, it’s about a deterioration in run rate
fundamentals," Tusa said.
Noting the steep drop for GE shares from $30 in early 2017, Tusa
said "this move still does not sufficiently reflect the
fundamental facts, in our view."
Tusa kept his "underweight" rating on the stock as he cut his
price target to $6 from $10.
Following Tusa's note, GE spokeswoman Jennifer Erickson said in
a statement: "GE is a fundamentally strong company with a sound
liquidity position. We are taking aggressive action to
strengthen our balance sheet through accelerated deleveraging
and position our businesses for success."
GE shares, which were booted from the blue-chip Dow Jones
Industrial Average <.DJI> earlier this year, have now slumped
some 50 percent in 2018 alone.
Some on Wall Street are optimistic that new Chief Executive
Larry Culp, former head of Danaher Corp <DHR.N> who took over on
Oct. 1, will be able to spark a turnaround for the company.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf and Alwyn Scott; Editing by
Bernadette Baum)
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