Investors Shouldnt Get Ahead Of Themselves On General Electric

There is a good reason not to pay attention to General Electric earnings and analysts who cover the company.

Because if you did, you would have lost your shirt. To be fair, a couple of analysts have been, belatedly, correct.

Compare General Electric’s GE, -0.47% chart with that of the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.00% and the S&P 500 ETF SPY, +0.00% The drastic underperformance of General Electric’s stock will surely jump out at you.

Let’s explore the chart.

Chart

Please click here for an annotated chart of General Electric. Please note the following:

• General Electric is showing the first green candle on the chart in a long time. This is positive.

• During the selloff, volume picked up. This shows that weak hands may have already sold. This is positive.

• The relative strength index (RSI) is moving upward from a severe oversold condition. This is positive.

Ask Arora: Nigam Arora answers your questions about investing in stocks, ETFs, bonds, gold and silver, oil and currencies. Have a question? Send it to Nigam Arora.

Earnings

The latest General Electric earnings have been above the consensus and the whisper numbers. Consensus numbers are the average of what analysts publish. Whisper numbers are the ones that analysts privately tell their best clients. Stocks move based on the difference between actual earnings and projections compared with the whisper numbers.

The stock initially moved up on earnings. However, in our analysis at The Arora Report, the quality of earnings is poor. Further, General Electric does not have enough cash to accomplish what it needs to do in the future. This may mean a capital increase or more asset sales. Such events are normally viewed as negative by the stock market.

In the case of General Electric, however, investors may perceive such events as fixing the problem and, thus, being positive for the stock.

Those looking for a simple answer may want to realize that there is nothing simple in the stock market. All investors will benefit by bringing more sophistication.

What to do now

Investors may consider scaling in the buy zone. Note that The Arora Report provides specific buy zones, target zones and stop zones to its subscribers.

Disclosure: Subscribers to The Arora Report may have positions in the securities mentioned in this article. Nigam Arora is an investor, engineer and nuclear physicist by background who has founded two Inc. 500 fastest-growing companies. He is the founder of The Arora Report, which publishes four newsletters. Nigam can be reached at Nigam@TheAroraReport.com.

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