Category Archives: General Electric

The Crash of 1929 and the Utility Average

There is much discussion about the stock market crash of 1929.  By default, that discussion centers around the collapse of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (as the S&P 500 didn’t exist at the time) which declined -89% from the 1929 high of 381.17 to the 1932 low of 41.22.

Little discussed is the collapse of the Dow Jones Utility Average. At the peak of the Dow Jones Utility Average, also topping in 1929, the index declined -92.67%. While the decline in the Dow Jones Industrial Average lasted approximately 2 and a half years, the final low in the Dow Jones Utility Average did not materialize until 1942, approximately 11 and a half years later.

image

While on the road to recovery from the 1932 low, the Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to exceed the 1929 peak in late 1954 and never looked back.

image

Meanwhile, The Dow Jones Utility Average has had a different path.  From the 1942 low, The Dow Jones Utility Average did not manage to attain the 1929 high until 1963.  By 1965, the Dow Jones Utility Average achieved a peak and fell to a low of 57.93 in September 1974.

image

Worse still, the Dow Jones Utility Average did not break above the 1929 high for good until 1984, creating the most unparalleled “cup and handle” technical formation.  You would think that the breakout from the 1929 high would be significant enough to not worry about revisiting such a level again.  However, the Dow Jones Utility Average came within 20% of the 1929 peak on October 9, 2002.

image

The decline in the Dow Jones Utility Average is not unlike the decline in the Nikkei 225 Index which peaked in 1989 at 38,876.94 and bottomed in 2003 at 7,607.88 fourteen years later (or at 7,054.98 in 2009 at 20 years after the peak). There is another similarity in the Dow Jones Utility Average and the Nikkei 225 Index.

After the collapse of the Nikkei 225, it was realized that the complex crossholding relationship of publicly traded companies made it difficult to unwind intricated positions in stock of insolvent or illiquid companies.  The complexity of the relationship is illustrated below.

image

Likewise, the Dow Jones Utility Average list of companies, after 1929, had similar cross holding relationships as seen in the illustration below.

image

Highlighted in red is Electric Bond & Share Company.  Below is the Electric Bond & Share Company web of business relationships.

image

In the example below, the violent rise and subsequent collapse in the share price of all publicly traded utilities made it difficult to unwind positions to allow for sale of assets or loans based on secured assets related to the actual business.

image

Electric Bond & Share Company had a share price increase from $45 in 1926 to as high as $475 in 1929.  Only to later fall as low as $1 in 1932.  Surviving such a rapid rise and fall wasn’t something that could have happened without considerable intervention.

Behind most utility companies was General Electric (GE) with outright ownership or majority stakes in the businesses. Ultimately, “orderly” government reorganization of the industry is what allowed General Electric to survive while the unwinding process dragged on for decades in the utility industry.

When there is discussion of the ravages of the stock market crash of 1929, keep in mind this story of the Dow Jones Utility Average.  The decline and recovery is worth your time and consideration.

GE: Is the Party Over?

Review:

  • On January 21 2018, when General Electric (GE) was trading around $16, we said, “the speed at which the current decline is taking place indicates that sentiment will push the stock to the $5.27 price and the elimination from the Dow Jones Industrial Average is eminent.”
  • On December 12, 2018, General Electric (GE) achieved a closing low of $6.45, 22% above our estimated downside target.
  • On January 1, 2019, when General Electric was trading around $7.25, we said, “…now is the time to consider the upside resistance targets.  The above chart lays bare the expectations for an upside move.” We also said, “The year 2019 could be forgiving to GE…” This was 12.40% above the December 12, 2018 low.
  • On December 31, 2019, the closing price of General Electric stood at $11.16.

Update

Before the full year of 2020 was under way, General Electric had managed to give back all ofthe  2019 gains.  The era of forgiving has been quickly forgotten.

image

Now that General Electric sits on the cusp of the 2018 low, the questions becomes, can the stock recover and retest the 2020 peak?  We don’t think so for two primary reasons.

  1. Declining below the $19.82 upside resistance target.
  2. The potential for a recession for the next 6 months.

The fact that the price could rise as expected and the falter at the very resistance target that was highlighted near the 2018 low suggests that there are powerful forces at work.

The reality is that a recession is on the way.  the depth and length is the only unknown.  However, we have always maintained that if General Electric couldn’t do well during a booming economy then what should be expected during a recession?

We advise caution as the market seems bound and determined to expose failings and frauds which will result in collateral damage to companies like General Electric.

Review: GE Upside Targets

History:

  • On January 21 2018, when General Electric (GE) was trading around $16, we said, “the speed at which the current decline is taking place indicates that sentiment will push the stock to the $5.27 price and the elimination from the Dow Jones Industrial Average is eminent.”
  • On December 12, 2018, General Electric (GE) achieved a closing low of $6.45, 22% above our estimated downside target.
  • On January 1, 2019, when General Electric was trading around $7.25, we said, “…now is the time to consider the upside resistance targets.  The above chart lays bare the expectations for an upside move.” We also said, “The year 2019 could be forgiving to GE…” This was 12.40% above the December 12, 2018 low.
  • On November 21, 2019, the closing price of General Electric stood at $11.59 or +59.86% above the January 1, 2019 level. This was 84.44% of the entire run from the December 12, 2018 closing low.

Revised GE Upside Targets

After demonstrating a history of consistency, in terms of the general trend in the stock price of General Electric, we must revise the Speed Resistance Lines that were issued in January 1, 2019 to more accurately reflect the changes that have occurred in the last 11 months.

image

The upside resistance targets are as follows:

  • $19.05 (conservative target)
  • $23.33 (mid-range target)
  • $27.48 (extreme target)

It would be a major coup for the price of General Electric to exceed the conservative upside resistance target at $19.05.  For now, we will reiterate that almost all stocks achieve the conservative targets through either the passage of time or increase/decrease in price.

As was said in January 2019, “GE could achieve all of the designated upside resistance targets and still be in a declining trend.”

James Grant was Right About GE

In James Grant’s book Minding Mr. Market, in an article titled “Hot Light On GE” that was originally published September 14, 1990, Grant highlights a curious thought experiment (emphasis ours):

“In the time saved by not visiting GE headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut, Jay Diamond, our associate publisher, compiled a fascinating historical table.  The information describes the parent company’s consolidated finances in a succession of business downturns, starting with 1932, which happens to be the year in which the forerunner to GECC was started.  It ends in what may or may not prove to be a recession year, pending statistical revisions, 1989.  Evolution has meant more leverage, thinner coverages, lower returns on assets, and rising contributions to consolidated income by financial activity.

Interestingly, GE’s debt rating hasn’t changed in the past fifty-eight years, even though its financial profile has.  At the bottom of the Great Depression, long-term debt was negligible, interest coverage was massively redundant, and the current ratio was better than 2:1.  In 1989, a non-depression year, long-term debt constituted 77 percent of equity, interest coverage was less than 2:1 (surely a remarkably low reading) and the current ration was less than 1:1. (Grant, James. Minding Mr. Market. Times Book, Random House. 1993. page 362).”

image

Grant goes on to explore the various rationales given by ratings agencies as to why GE could maintain a AAA rating in spite of their deteriorating financial position.  What was the outcome of this erosion of financial security while holding on to a AAA rating?

image

GE was rewarded with a stock increase of +1,111.97% from the September 1990 close to the October 2000 peak.  Somehow, GE couldn’t lose it’s AAA credit rating until after the March 9, 2009 low, after a decline in stock price of –83.96%.  In fact, GE’s change in credit status was effectively a marker for the bottom in the market.

The questions for today is, after the 2009 low and recovery in the stock market while GE sinks to the lowest level in 24 years, do we think that GE has more problems that have not been revealed since September 1990?  Will the recent accusation of GE committing accounting fraud be the marker for the top after the long run-up in the market since 2009?

See also: Andrew Left is Wrong About GE

General Electric Upside Targets

We’ve been tracking the long and painful slide in the shares of General Electric for quite some time.  In a January 2018 posting titled “The Rise and Fall of GE,” when GE was trading at $16.17, we said the following of General Electric:

“From what we can tell, the price target at the ascending $10.97 level is a lock (approximately $12.18).  This would match the decline that was experienced by GE in the period from 2000-2002.  The question becomes, will GE match the decline of 2007-2009, on a percentage basis.  If so, then GE would decline to as low as $5.27.”

image

So far, the decline has been consistent with expectations.  However, now is the time to consider the upside resistance targets.  The above chart lays bare the expectations for an upside move. The upside targets are:

  • $19.82
  • $24.28
  • $28.60

Interestingly, GE could achieve all of the designated upside resistance targets and still be in a declining trend.  The year 2019 could be forgiving to GE, but the stock price is not out of the woods just yet.

When is GE in the clear? When the stock appreciably increases above $32.93.

GE Altimeter

Below is an updated Altimeter for General Electric (GE). 

Continue reading

Coppock Curve: General Electric

On March 29, 2018, we highlighted General Electric (GE) Altimeter and provided some insight into when to acquire shares. In addition to that analysis, we will apply our knowledge in Coppock Curve to the company to enhance our timing. Continue reading

General Electric Altimeter

Below is the Altimeter for General Electric (GE).  The red arrow on the far right indicates the current level of the Altimeter.

Continue reading

DJIA: The Weakest Link

If the saying that “you’re only as good as your weakest link” is true then investors need to pay attention to General Electric (GE).  In the price-weighted Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), GE has 0.38% of an impact on the DJIA.  Such a low impact on the index makes the movement of GE on the index almost non-existent.  However, the manner in which this ailment in the index is treated says a lot about the overall market.

Leaving aside the fact that General Electric has been in the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1907, GE is the new, “As General Motors goes, so goes the nation.”  It isn’t that GE is as broadly diversified in domestic manufacturing that is the issue, though it broadly impacts many industries, instead, it is the continued share decline and the impact on pensions, insurance, 401k, retirement plans, and bank funds that are being adversely affected by cross shareholding of GE as it has declined into what appears to be oblivion.

The current environment affecting GE reminds us of the spiraling feedback loop of cross-shareholding (zaibatsu) in the Japanese stock market from 1989 to the present.  The fact that a clean cut could not be made with badly managed companies due to stock holding relationships only allowed the deferral of addressing the real problems within the market.  what was the impact of cross-shareholding on the Nikkei stock index in Japan?

image

By all accounts, the decline in the Nikkei of –81.87% was due primarily because of the difficulty of disengaging the tangled web of cross-shareholding relationships.  Ultimately, improved prospects of Japanese companies came in the form of divesting cross-shareholdings.

In our opinion, the situation is the same with General Electric.  The managers of the Dow Jones Industrial Average have allowed the disparity between the top weighted Dow component (Boeing) to go far beyond the norm of the bottom component (General Electric), typically 10 times (before getting kicked out of the index) but now it is more than 24 times the value of GE.

image

Had GE been removed from the Dow Jones Industrial Average at 10x the value of the highest priced stock in the index (Boeing), GE would have been removed from the index in late August 2017.  The fact that GE has been allowed to remain in the index means that the managers of the DJIA are in denial of the problems at GE or are acting at the behest of fund managers hoping for a turnaround before dumping their shares.

Right now, the weakest link in the DJIA is allowed to stay afloat at the expense of millions of retirement funds who are required to hold “blue chip” stocks regardless of performance.  GE cannot claim to be “blue chip” especially if it gets booted from the DJIA.  Although, the accounting scandals and restatements since the Jack Welch era should have been the first indication that GE wasn’t a “blue chip” stock.

The cascading negative effect of not booting GE from the DJIA is far worse than the impact of kicking it to the curb.

The Rise and Fall of GE

General Electric (GE) appears to be spiraling into oblivion.  As we’ve suggested last year, we think that GE is going to be booted from the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA).  In this article, we’ll take a look at how GE got to this point and what might be in store for the stock price going forward.

1975-1981

It is possible that the beginning of the end for GE could have been marked by the acquisition of Utah International on December 16, 1976, in a deal that was dubbed “one of the largest acquisition proposals in the nation’s history.”  That transaction set in motion the machinations of a complex set of accounting deals and dealings from which GE never seemed to extract itself from.

In the bid to acquire Utah International, General Electric, “…was able to use the pooling method [of accounting] to help boost its profits…” For GE, the “…unrecorded asset value would be reported as a gain…” when the eventual sale of those assets came due.  Another benefit for GE would be that “…even if the assets were not later sold, their below market valuation allowed GE to understate its expenses (cost of sales and depreciation) and thereby overstate net income.”  The problem with these methods of accounting slight-of-hand is that GE would not be able to wean itself from these strategies.  In fact, this approach to acquisition and growth only increases as time went on.

Alarmingly, the acquisition of Utah International came after GE had exited the computer business.  As noted at the time, “the computer business proved too much for Fred Borch [GE Chairman & CEO, 1967-1972].  Reg Jones [GE Chairman & CEO 1972-1981] made his mark getting us out of it. Will someone have to bail him [Reginald Jones] out of Utah International?”  The combined Borch and Jones years are compared to the period from 2003-2018 during the tenure of Jeff Immelt in the chart below (using the approximate number of trading days going backward from January 19, 2018).

image

The entrance into the computer business followed by the entry into the mining business was simply one failure after the other.  Adding insult to injury is the fact that the period from 1967 to 1981 was a confirmed secular bear market for stocks.  However, the Utah International failure introduced the rampant and widespread use of creative accounting which would augment Jack Welch’s [GE Chairman & CEO 1981-2001] tenure during a secular bull market that began when the Dow Jones Industrial Average was trading at the 1,000 level and peaked at above 11,000.

1981-2001

Below is the stock price of GE during the Jack Welch years from 1981 to 2001 which coincided with a secular bull market in the same period of time.

image

The nature of secular bull markets often see company fundamentals improve and hopefully the stock price will follow.  As shown above, the price of GE increased more than 45 times in the period from 1981 to 2000.  However, when looking at the per share reported earnings, as provided by Value Line Investment Survey from 1982, we can see that earnings “only” increased a little less than 8 times.

image

While fundamentals, stock price, and market sentiment often coincide there is no rule that the stock price has to match the fundamentals in any way, shape, or form.  However, seeing an “industrial” company’s stock price out-distance the reported earnings by such a wide margin suggests that the stock price might gravitate towards a more “realistic” mean eventually.  The perfect setup for this reversion to the mean is a secular bear market, which in our view began in 2000 to 2016 period.

It could seem that choosing the year 2000 as the beginning of secular bear market is arbitrary, at best.  However, as noted before, the well established stock market secular cycles and Warren Buffett’s November 1999 commentary of below average market performance for the 2000 to 2016 period is enough to convince us that the period in question isn’t random.

2001-2018

This leads us to the Jeff Immelt era as Chairman & CEO of General Electric from 2001 to 2017.  There could not have been a worse period to be in charge of a hobbling industrial giant that is hamstrung with well entrenched accounting methods that work against the company when the stock price isn’t in a rising trend.

Remember, when Immelt took over at GE as Chairman & CEO on September 7, 2001, the stock price was already in the beginning stages of collapse after having fallen –34% up to that point.  Even of the price of GE were to trade in range it would be bad news for the company.  A falling stock price spelled disaster for investors who were hoping and expecting a rebound to the prior highs.

image

Many GE investors attribute the decline of GE’s stock price to the management practices of Jeff Immelt.  However, much of this view is simply the mistaken attribution of correlation as causation.

If Warren Buffett thought, in late 1999, that we’d be lucky to see average market returns of +4% and GE fundamentals are calibrated to do better when the stock price rises then there is no evidence to suggest that Immelt did anything that was materially harmful (actual inflation adjusted CAGR of the S&P 500 return was +2.27%).  Instead, what we’ve witnessed in GE stock price has been a reversion to the mean from the prior period of excess.

Price & Time Targets

Based on Edson Gould’s “Three Step” rule, GE has one more leg down.  In theory, this should bring the GE stock price below the 2009 low.  However, there is a lot of ground to cover for GE to get to the 2009 low and there is no guarantee that it will happen.  With this in mind, we’ll outline the previous two declines, 2000-2002 & 2007-2009, to establish any possible precedent that might emerge.

  • 2000-2002
    • The decline from the 2000 peak did not see any respite until 2002.  That decline saw General Electric fall –63%.  The period of decline lasted 530 trading days.
  • 2007-2009
    • The decline from the 2007 peak ended in early 2009 and was approximately –84%.  The period of decline lasted 359 trading days.
  • 2016-present
    • So far, the price of General Electric (GE) has declined approximately –50.62% and has lasted 381 trading days.  As seen in the chart below, GE has blasted through Gould’s Speed Resistance Lines at $25.66 and $18.32.

image

From what we can tell, the price target at the ascending $10.97 level is a lock (approximately $12.18).  This would match the decline that was experienced by GE in the period from 2000-2002.  The question becomes, will GE match the decline of 2007-2009, on a percentage basis.  If so, then GE would decline to as low as $5.27.  This would fit exactly with the nature and pattern of declines expressed by Gould in his “Three Step” rule.

Time targets seem to indicated that General Electric will reach the $10.97 or $5.27 low on April 20, 2018.  The speed at which the current decline is taking place indicates that sentiment will push the stock to the $5.27 price and the elimination from the Dow Jones Industrial Average is eminent.  We see the possible replacements for General Electric in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) to be Adobe (ADBE), Expedia (EXPE), Google (GOOG) or Amazon (AMZN).  In the case of Google and Amazon, their inclusion into the DJIA is predicated on a 10:1 stock split.

sources:

  • Stuart, Reginald. $1.9 Billion G.E. Bid in Mining Merger. New York Times. December 16, 1975. page 1.
  • Smith, Gene. Acquisition Set Today of Utah International. New York Times. December 20, 1976. page 67.
  • Schilit, Howard. Financial Shenanigans,2nd edition. McGraw Hill. 2002. page 103.
  • Value Line Investment Survey. General Electric. 1982-2018.