Horacio Marquez

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Which investor wouldn’t want to own General Electric Co. (GE)?

After all:

  • With a market value of $300 billion, it’s the biggest industrial company in America.
  • It owns one of the original “Big Three” television broadcasting networks in NBC – though it also operates the successful “informative portal” MSNBC in conjunction with high-tech heavyweight Microsoft Corp. (MSFT).
  • Of the 12 firms that were part of the original Dow Jones Industrial Average, this is the only one that remains.
  • It strives to be either first or second in every business it operates.
  • It’s one of the very few major industrial companies in the world to enjoy a AAA debt rating – an achievement made all the more remarkable by the fact that it operates a massive financial-services business.
  • It’s a major player in the fast-growing emerging markets of Eastern Europe, Latin America and Asia – and it’s been a market force in China for more than a decade.
  • And it raises its dividend almost every year.

Unfortunately, all hasn’t been well in GE-Land for some time. Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey R. Immelt, a longtime insider who took over the top job in 2001, hasn’t been able to achieve the growth or consistency that legendary predecessor John F. “Neutron Jack” Welch seemed able to maintain so effortlessly during his 20-year stewardship of GE (1981-2001). Nor does he enjoy the Wall Street adoration that Welch always seemed to command.

Immelt hasn’t been able to achieve the predictable consistency that was a hallmark of Welch’s days at GE’s helm.

Even so, when GE reported its first quarter results on April 11 – and badly missed analysts’ estimates – it was a shocker to Wall Street. Nobody I know remembers the last time that GE missed earnings. The stock sold off sharply and nothing the company has done since then has been enough to restore confidence in the U.S. industrial heavyweight.

But this isn’t a cause for concern. Indeed, this actually represents a rare buying opportunity. Let me explain …

GE is managed with a very strong discipline and it is this discipline that leads us to point out that buying GE on weakness is an excellent idea. The company’s portfolio of businesses is run with a set of very strict criteria destined to maximize shareholder value. And those guidelines are “static:” They evolve to stay ahead of the rapidly changing global marketplace.

Indeed, in late July, GE announced a reorganization that pairs its six main business lines into four business units to take advantage of the world’s most enduring and promising long-term growth trends. Those new units consist of:

  • GE Technology Infrastructure, led by Vice Chairman John Rice, which includes healthcare, aviation, transportation and enterprise solutions.
  • GE Infrastructure, headed by John Krenicki, which will include energy, oil & gas and water.
  • GE Capital, led by Vice Chairman Mike Neal, which brings together all of the company’s financial-services businesses, including commercial finance, GE Money, the corporate treasury, and the industry verticals.
  • and NBC Universal, headed by Jeff Zucker, which will remain unchanged.

In the sweeping reorganization, GE’s Commercial Finance, GE Money, GE Industrial and GE Healthcare were folded into new, expanded business segments. Immelt has said GE will consider selling portions of GE Money, which provides banking and credit services.

Under Immelt, the Fairfield, Conn.-based GE has been slimming down and refocusing in an effort to create a less-cyclical company. It’s already rid itself of business units that weren’t driving profitability. Last year, GE offloaded its underperforming plastics business, selling it to a Saudi Arabian company for $11.6 billion. Back in May, GE announced plans to spin off or sell its century-old home appliance business. When it found no serious takers, it announced in July that it would spin off the entire business unit.

These are the right moves to make, and show that GE is going to focus on such broad global trends as infrastructure development. For infrastructure alone there’s an estimated $40 trillion worth of projects that need to be done around the world.

Commercial finance also will be important. To that end, GE recently announced the formation of a new joint venture with an Abu Dhabi government investment company that will bring a badly needed $4 billion worth of outside capital into the commercial finance business, which has been weakened by the financial crisis.

The deal with the Mubadala Development Co. also will launch or broaden several other ventures with the Persian Gulf sovereign wealth fund, which expects to become one of the top 10 institutional investors in GE. That, too, is a good move, as it connects GE with one of the key emerging sources of worldwide capital – sovereign funds – while also creating a relationship with a leading player in one of the world’s top growing markets – the Middle East.

The themes that define GE’s business portfolio underscore the company’s commitment to establishing sustainable competitive advantages in high-growth, high-margin markets.

For example, its infrastructure businesses are enjoying very fast rates of growth, thanks to industrialization and urbanization in the emerging markets and the weak U.S. dollar.  This business, which supplies and later maintains highly differentiated, high-margin products where the company commands market leadership – or is at least a very close second - includes: Jet engines for military jets and commercial airliners, turbines for electric power plants, and elements for wind generation. They are delivering more than half of the industrial unit revenue and enjoy strong double-digit growth.

GE is poised to enjoy very fast rates of growth in the years to come as its business line-up potential starts kicking in, as we are already seeing in the infrastructure business.

The recent earnings miss was mainly due to real estate deals that could not close because of the financial freeze-up in the global credit markets, last-minute charge-offs in GE’s finance business, and some weakness in the company’s U.S. industrial results. This temporary situation has subsequently seen some consistent improvement as banks take losses and recapitalize, and as the stimulative measures of both the U.S. Federal Reserve and the U.S. government provide the anticipated boosts to the U.S. economy. In this sense, the U.S. economy should re-accelerate in the year’s second half, lifting the performances of the financial, media and industrial businesses in this country.

GE, with its typical discipline, will continue to divest slower-growing business units, using the realized capital to invest in faster-growing businesses. As this business plan evolves and the U.S. economic growth accelerates, the company should clearly outperform the much-lowered expectations that Wall Street analysts established to following the company’s earnings miss.

It is time to buy GE with a medium to long term, while enjoying a 4.16% dividend yield that is superior to 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds.

Here’s one other thing to consider: GE has a long history of boosting its dividend payout in the fourth quarter. So buy now and watch as the yield on your original purchase price escalates year after year after year.

If you are hesitant to endure market volatility, just dollar-cost average over a few weeks as you buy into this top U.S. company.

Action to Take: BUY shares of General Electric Co., and capitalize on its rebirth as a U.S. industrial powerhouse, perhaps using the dollar-cost-averaging technique to smooth out market volatility as you build your position in this stock.

Original post

This article has 14 comments:

  •  
    Aug 18 08:50 AM
    Let me get my wallet out and start buying GE.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 08:54 AM
    300 million???
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 10:33 AM
    If you like it here wait a few months and you will love it after it corrects a little more. It all sounds good, but you did not discuss sales to the non-consuming classes of the world? That will be a growing problem. And, does GE self finance bother you any? It does bother others who think GE "buys" sales, like they did under Jack. I like the company, but I wonder if they have some poor, even bad habits on inflated reporting.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 11:18 AM
    a lot of negativism in our world.Nothing is perfect and we always have the terrible habit at looking at the and the ugly forgetting completely the good.Well I agree with the fact that this is a great company and the use of dollar-cost average. What s wrong with that? maybe they don t like the dividend.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 02:50 PM
    Welch got to paddle downstream.
    Immelt has had to paddle downstream
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 03:10 PM
    i bought more.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 10:18 PM
    I wish they would spin off or sell NBC. Now is the time when the
    olympics are generating profits, and exposure. Long term less
    people are watching tv, and more are surfing the net. So growth
    at NBC may be slow. Take that cash and pay a special dividend or
    buy back more shares. Invest part of it in green energy. That will drive
    growth in the future. Especially with the emerging markets
    building boom. The company has too many moving parts and
    should concentrate on growth. I own the company, but the shares
    have been stuck in neutral for a decade.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 18 11:09 PM
    What do you think of GE Capital and its continuing effects on the other half of the company?
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 19 02:25 AM
    G.E has gotten ride ofit's appliance division that's a good start, in its day it was fine. now they are moving on to new markets with greater long term needs and less proven competition where they can truly shine.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 19 02:30 AM
    G.E. has gotten rid of its appliance division(spelling correction) i never wer glasses when i should.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 19 10:48 AM
    This is a fine time to buy, totally agree dollar average into it. Only suckers are "all in". Have been buying since the initial disappointment. These guys traditionally never miss on earnings, so take advantage. I agree Immelt's waters are a little more choppy than his predecessors. These guys have a foot in the door on every business that betters this world that makes real sense going forward. They also have someone hot to pay too much for their rail business too.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 19 02:32 PM
    It is going to be, in retrospect, an obvious choice to buy not only GE right here, but the banks as well.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 25 03:00 AM
    Do you trust the bank exeuctives that knowingly sold the sub-par martgages to low or almost no fico No doc score people. just to get year end multi million dollar bonuses.
    G.E. has a lot to loose the banks kill people with stock prices and then kill us again when the F.D.I.C. has to bail out the smaller banks. or a prime bank has to sell out 3.9 percent ownership to a soverighn nation at 11 percent
    interest for 10 years, for the money they needed.
    Citi is you have to ask.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 25 03:01 AM
    Citi if you have to ask (sorry glasses still missing)
    Reply | Link to Comment
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