General Electric Turnaround In Doubt Amid Severe Economic Downturn

 | Apr 15, 2020 06:46AM ET

Investors who've been watching closely to see how General Electric's (NYSE:GE) turnaround takes shape will now be feeling very much more worried. The coronavirus pandemic is putting more pressure on the company’s precarious cash — something this industrial giant badly needs to get back on its feet.

General Electric last week warned its first-quarter earnings would be below its prior forecasts and pulled its financial guidance for the full year, citing the disruptions and uncertainty caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

GE now expects first-quarter earnings to be materially below its prior estimate of $0.10 a share. It expects cash flow from its industrial operations to be about negative $2 billion for the March quarter.

To ride through this severe economic downturn, which the International Monetary Fund predicted would be the steepest in almost a century, GE said on Monday that it was issuing $6 billion in new debt as part of a financial restructuring process. New bonds, which mature beginning in 2024, would be used to retire shorter-term debt.

But GE’s decision to issue more debt means more bad news in store for some analysts. JPMorgan analyst Stephen Tusa, who correctly predicted the company’s troubles in 2017 as demand for its industrial products collapsed, told clients in a note that GE was “the most expensive value trap we’ve seen.”