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GE Tumbles as Key JPMorgan Analyst Returns to Bearish View

GE Tumbles as Key JPMorgan Analyst Returns to Bearish View

(Bloomberg) -- General Electric Co. plunged the most in the S&P 500 after a top analyst recommended selling the battered company’s shares, damping enthusiasm for a nascent turnaround.

JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Steve Tusa, who famously predicted the manufacturer’s collapse ahead of his peers, renewed his bearish call by downgrading GE to underweight and trimming his price target. With the surprise decision, Tusa walked back a December upgrade that sparked a stock rally.

GE Tumbles as Key JPMorgan Analyst Returns to Bearish View

“Investors are underestimating the severity of the challenges and underlying risks at GE, while overestimating the value of small positives,” Tusa said in a note. The analyst pointed to severely constrained free cash flow, which will limit earnings potential.

The bearish comments underscore the challenges facing new Chief Executive Officer Larry Culp as he tries to repair GE’s damaged balance sheet and regain investor trust amid one of the worst slumps in the company’s 127-year history. Since taking the helm in October, Culp has sold assets and cut costs in an effort to accelerate the turnaround.

Through last week, the moves had helped drive a stock gain of about 50 percent since mid-December, when Tusa caused a stir by upgrading GE to neutral and saying the company’s troubles appeared to be dissipating. The analyst at that point had had a sell rating on the shares for more than two years and had firmly established himself as the leading bear on GE during the company’s stock-market collapse.

The shares fell 7.4 percent to $9.27 at 1:35 p.m. in New York after dropping as much as 8.6 percent for the biggest intraday decline in almost five months. Tusa cut his price target by one dollar to $5 a share, the lowest on Wall Street, with an implied downside of 50 percent from last week’s close.

Cash Burn

GE has been largely stagnant since Culp last month revealed that the Boston-based company would burn as much as $2 billion in free cash flow this year. While he didn’t offer specific forecasts beyond 2019, he said there would be “significant improvement” in 2020 and 2021.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

“The lack of public commentary from Moody’s and Fitch on General Electric’s 2019 outlook is a concern, given we expect the company to breach the targets that both set for high BBB ratings.”
-- Joel Levington, Credit analyst
Click here to view the research.

Tusa was cautious on that point, saying Wall Street is “significantly over-projecting the bounce” in free cash flow in the coming years. GE’s finance arm, he said, “will likely consume material cash for the foreseeable future.”

The analyst is also down on GE’s manufacturing divisions. The power-equipment business will continue to struggle, he said, while fundamentals in the highly touted aviation unit are “weaker than meet the eye.”

High leverage “leaves the company vulnerable to liquidity issues in the event of a recession,” Tusa said.

Currently, 10 firms have buy ratings on GE, while nine recommend holding it and three have the equivalent of sell ratings on the stock, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The average price target is $11.

Separately, GE was fined 52 million euros ($58.4 million) for misleading the European Union’s regulators during their review of its 1.5 billion-euro takeover of LM Wind Power, which designs and produces blades used in wind turbines.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ryan Vlastelica in New York at rvlastelica1@bloomberg.net;Richard Clough in New York at rclough9@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Case at bcase4@bloomberg.net, ;Catherine Larkin at clarkin4@bloomberg.net, Susan Warren

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