Chart Of The Day: Beaten Down GE Stock Likely Headed Lower

 | Oct 10, 2017 10:15AM ET

by Pinchas Cohen

This past Friday, General Electric (NYSE:GE) CFO Jeff Bornstein dropped a bomb on markets by unexpectedly announcing his retirement. This, just weeks after it was announced by the company that Director and Chairman of the company's board of directors, Jeffrey Immelt, who was scheduled to retire at the end of December, had already retired—two months earlier than expected.

h3 Stock Tumbles On Bornstein Stunner/h3

Investors, who were already a bit unsteady on the stock and the company after the Immelt surprise, were sorely disappointed at losing Bornstein too, an insider they valued as a straight talker and cost-focused key executive. The market punished the company with a sharp, 4-percent selloff, GE's biggest plunge in 15 months.

In a year during which the stock price had already fallen by 25 percent—meaning it is now underperforming by a staggering 39 percent—against a market backdrop that's up roughly 14 percent, the unexpected retirement announcement was oddly reminiscent of Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer’s sudden retirement notification in early September.

At that time, we said of Fischer:

Some hypothesize that his sudden resignation for “personal reasons” is an escape in front of an economic hurricane he doesn't want to weather, at the end of a decade-long run of global QE.

Similarly, with regard to General Electric, some analysts have been raising concerns that recent management changes are due to deeper troubles the company is facing which have not yet come to light.

h3 More Trouble Ahead?/h3

Might these hidden ailments be detected via the balance of supply and demand, visually recognizable on the stock’s chart?