Amid losses, GE still paying dividends
General Electric is reporting a 44% drop in quarterly profit. Despite this, the technology conglomerate is still paying dividends to investors. Why? Alisa Roth reports.
General Electric logo on a stove (David McNew/Getty Images)
More on The Economy, America's Financial Crisis
TEXT OF STORY
Kai Ryssdal: General Electric is one of those stocks that's got out-sized influence. It's one of the Dow Industrials. It's been thought of as a bellwether for the stock market for decades now. And it's been a pretty solid company for just about as long.
Today GE posted massive losses for the fourth quarter. 2009's not going to be any better. The exact phrase from CEO Jeff Immelt today was "extremely difficult." Marketplace's Alisa Roth has more from New York.
Alisa Roth: Look at what General Electric does and you realize its name is actually pretty apt. The company makes light bulbs and appliances. It also builds jet engines. And it owns most of the media giant NBC Universal.
Richard Sparks: But a significant portion of their earnings in recent quarters has come from their finance area. So it makes them vulnerable to the effects of the recent credit crisis.
That's Richard Sparks. He's an equities analyst with Schaeffer's Investment Research. He says that's part of why the company's earnings fell by more than 40 percent in the last quarter. After all, what financial company's doing well right now?
On the other hand, GE's solid reputation means investors get nervous when it runs into trouble. Erik Ristuben is with Russell Investments.
Erik Ristuben: What you're seeing with GE is just -- it's a name people know and it's making people realize the economic weakness that we're experiencing is now translating directly into earnings.
Even so, investors will still get a dividend from GE. The company says it has cash on the balance sheet and it's the right thing to do. Ristuben says that's a risky bet.
Ristuben: The reality is that, in most cases, the best balance sheet asset in terms of quality is cash.
And, of course, it takes cash to pay out dividends. Ristuben says it's a calculation a lot of companies will have to make this year.
In New York, I'm Alisa Roth for Marketplace.








Comments
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01/26/2009
GE did NOT post losses, maybe one or two units posted losses, but overall, GE had only a reduction of profits, but is still on the positive side. GE is playing the same game it has always played: Build value for the long run. Long run is not 1 year, two years, or 5 years...
From Arlington, VA, 01/26/2009
I see a number of people have already made the same comment I wanted to make. I own GE Stock and was stunned to hear the opening to this story about the massive LOSSES. Please tell me your reported isn't so STUPID that he doesn't know the difference between declining PROFITS and LOSSES? I believe GE earned about 37 cents per share. Do you know how many companies would LOVE to have those kind of LOSSES? If you can't report better than this please don't report.
From Vadnais Heights, MN, 01/25/2009
"Amid losses"... What losses!? From GE's press release on their quarterly earnings "GE announced today fourth-quarter 2008 earnings from continuing
operations of $3.9 billion" ... "This was the third highest earnings year in GE history." So why wouldn't they give back money to the shareholders? Doom and gloom is the media's mood for the moment so we apparently need to slant every story that way.
From waynesboro, PA, 01/24/2009
alot of individual investors depend on ge dividends esp. older people who invested earlier in life
01/23/2009
Kai: you said "Today GE posted massive losses for the fourth quarter." This statement isn't really accurate, is it? massive losses?
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