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Tuesday, 2 October 2018

Finance: General Electric's new CEO should 'put a floor in the stock,' RBC says (GE)

A General Electric sign lights up at night.

General Electric announced Monday that CEO John Flannery would be replaced by current board member and former Danaher CEO Lawrence Culp, Jr., who is a catalyst for GE's operational improvements and should "put a floor in the stock," RBC says.

  • General Electric announced Monday that CEO John Flannery would be replaced by current board member and former Danaher CEO Lawrence Culp, Jr.
  • Culp is a catalyst for GE's operational improvements and should "put a floor in the stock," RBC says.
  • Last week, RBC warned investors were skeptical of GE's incremental bad news, such as its lagging power business.
  • Watch General Electric trade in real time here.

General Electric's new CEO is a catalyst for operational improvements and should "put a floor in the stock," RBC says.

The company announced Monday that CEO John Flannery would be removed from his role after 14 months on the job, and that current GE board member and former Danaher CEO Lawrence Culp, Jr., would replace him. GE shares surged more than 13% on the news, signaling market confidence in the change of leadership.

"We have known Mr. Culp for over 15 years and have deep respect for his leadership and relentless focus on operating excellence and accountability," a team of RBC analysts led by Deane Dray said in a note sent out to clients on Tuesday.

"Investor confidence in Larry Culp's strategic vision and operating excellence should put a floor in the stock."

Last week, Dray warned that GE stock hadn't bottomed yet, and that investors were skeptical of the company's ability to hit its full-year earnings per share guidance of $1.00-1.07 as the company's lagging power business, price-cost pressures compounded by US-China tariffs, and behind-schedule deliveries of its LEAP engine weighed.

And on Monday, GE let all the bad news out. It announced a $23 billion goodwill charge for its power business, and said free cash flow and earnings estimates for fiscal-year 2018 will likely miss their targets.

Encouraged by the reveal, Dray raised his price target to $15 from $13 and upgraded the stock to "outperform."

Finance: General Electric's new CEO should 'put a floor in the stock,' RBC says (GE)



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