Mr. Sherin said he expects the financial services business to be profitable for the first quarter and full-year 2009, and he addressed questions on the Company’s position on cash generation and loss reserves: "Over a three-year period here, we expect GE Capital to be profitable, even after $35 billion of losses and impairments. We're looking today for GE’s total cash flow to be around $16 billion for the year. In our stress case we could be down in the $14 billion level. In either scenario, we can fund the company. If conditions were to deteriorate beyond what is in our stress scenario, we also have the option of scaling back originations in GE Capital to conserve cash and capital." Emphasis added.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Voodoo maths and GE
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2 comments:
What does this mean for the common?
If the company survives you would seem to be rewarded in the end, no?
Yep.
If we work on 20 billion in pre-tax earnings and 60 billion in shortfall...
And we assume the pre-tax earnings go back to 10 times value (which given the industrial earnings of GE is likely)....
Then we get a market cap now of 200 billion minus 60 - or 140. The stock doubles from here IN CURRENT VALUE TERMS.
BUT... and this the problem - you have to get from A to B.
I know a few companies that are worth much more than current price if they survive - and I think they will survive - but survival is not guaranteed - at least without dilution.
J
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