General Electric
General Electric, Aig And The Cleansing Effects Of Crisis: Part I
Justice Litle, Editorial Director, Taipan Publishing Group
Could there be any possible upside to global recession and market declines to rival the Great Depression? Believe it or not, the answer is yes… General Electric gives answer as to why.
Though it seems hard to believe at times, there are positive aspects to a crisis. Just as nature renews itself through a cycle of death and rebirth, markets have to renew themselves too.
A classic example of renewal in nature is the routine forest fire. Over time, brush and debris build up on the forest floor. Meanwhile, old growth trees dominate the landscape. When fire comes, the brush and debris burn up like a fuel – as do the trees that have weakened or died over the years.
Then, after the fire burns itself out, the forest begins the cycle anew. The debris and dead wood of the past cycle have been naturally cleared, making room for new growth. The forest grows back in a healthier state than before.
Those of us in the western U.S. are painfully aware of how man has botched this natural cycle. Through a constant pattern of suppressing small fires, hapless forest managers created the conditions in which BIG fires occur.
When debris and dead wood are burned out every few years – as happens with nature’s way – the fuel build-up never reaches catastrophic levels. But when a forest area is allowed to accumulate layer after layer of dry fuel, turned into a tinderbox through many years of overzealous fire suppression, a single spark can touch off an inferno.
At a cost of untold billions in rampant fire destruction, forest managers seem to have learned the hard lessons. But the movers and shakers of global monetary policy have not. Refusing to allow for a downturn – suppressing it at all costs with easy money – is the economic equivalent of overzealous fire suppression. Let the “debris” of bad behavior, bad ideas and bull market hubris build up for too long, and what you get is a tinderbox.
Through poor stewardship of resources, a constant feeding of dry tinder and an utter disregard for risk, we created the conditions that now feed this inferno. Not just one man did this, but many men… Alan Greenspan not least among them, plus a virtual conga line of successors and enablers that followed.
Fire Still Works
So the bad news is, we’ve got our inferno. The fires are raging now. What else can you call it when the S&P is down more than 60% (!) from inflation-adjusted highs and the World Bank predicts a shrinking of the global economy this year for the first time since World War II.
The good news is that fire still works as a cleansing element.
A number of gross excesses, bad ideas and flat-out rotten Wall Street practices, born of a long and cushy bull market run, are turning to ash now, hopefully never to return. This is the good that comes of all this pain. So when you look around and wonder whether the incredible wealth destruction was worth it, for the most part the answer is “no” – no one really needed this. But in at least some respects the answer is yes.
That old market stalwart, General Electric (GE:NYSE), is a clear example of the cleansing process at work.
In keeping with our fire analogy, GE has been burnt to a cinder. The mighty colossus that once went head to head with Exxon (XOM:NYSE) for the title of “world’s largest company” now sports a market cap on par with Apple Computer .”
As a business, General Electric has a bit of a split personality. One side builds things, invents things and repairs things. The other side engages in mysterious acts of financial engineering. The troubles now are not to be found in the jet engine or light bulb side of the business. They are in GE Capital , the mysterious financial entity with disclosures so complex that analysts never truly understood it from day one.
Much as a magician pulls a rabbit out of a hat, for many years GE Capital was the black box from which the company pulled out perfectly managed earnings. Quarter after quarter, General Electric would beat estimates by a penny or two – just like clockwork.
Jack Welch, the current CEO’s legendary predecessor, pulled off this smoothing trick by moving things around on the GE Capital side with an eye for gaming the quarter. Assets would be sold or shuffled around to get the numbers just right.
Now that the world has met Bernie Madoff we’re all a little more distrustful of perfectly smooth trends. But back in the halcyon days of the late 20th century bull market, managed earnings were seen as a good thing, not a bad thing.
The Wall Street analysts covering GE may not have been geniuses, but they certainly weren’t idiots. They knew there was a fair amount of hocus-pocus going on… and they knew GE Capital’s disclosures were too complex to be reasonably understood. But Wall Street loved the reliability of that penny or two beat, quarter after quarter, which is why Jack Welch did it. And he was feted as a hero for it.
Some Habits Just Have to Die
Let’s not put any gloss on it: The whole concept of “managed earnings” is dumb.
In the real world, things move around. Earnings go up and earnings go down. Apart from businesses that rely exclusively on locked-in contracts with minimal fluctuation in labor costs and material inputs, hardly any business makes the same amount of profit every single quarter. The idea that a company could hit its estimated target bang on the nose every single quarter, without fail, is silly too. The real world is unpredictable. The real world is lumpy.
But investors like preternatural stability – or at least they thought they did, pre-Madoff – and so they happily accepted the managed earnings process that Welch pioneered. They smiled and nodded and happily ignored the fact that fully half of General Electric’s earnings came from a strangely high-handed entity (GE Capital) that no analyst understood.
These are the kind of bad habits and bull market indulgences we can say goodbye to as a result of the current crisis.
Old habits die hard – sometimes too hard – and it can often take a massive, wrenching dislocation to remove them. (Some refer to this as “the moment of forced awareness.” One bumper sticker I like reads, “Avoid painful forced awareness: accept reality now.”)
Now that General Electric has been laid low and forced to ponder the very real risk of its own demise, it is unlikely that the bad old ways of GE Capital will return. And now that investors have taken a collective frying pan to the face as payback for their artificial smoothness addiction, it is unlikely that black boxes will be playing a large role in the post-crisis markets to come.
Reason to Take Hope
All in all, the humbling of General Electric gives us reason to take hope. As mentioned, the jet engine and light bulb side of the business – the bringing good things to life side – will probably survive, and perhaps down the road even thrive once again.
And so when the question arises, “What good has come of this crisis,” we can at least point out that the likes of managed earnings, black boxes, and off-balance-sheet shenanigans are set to go the way of the dodo. The absence of such things will make for a sounder economy and a better investing future.
And we can further point out that, as stubborn and foolish as investors can be on a collective basis, if you hit them hard enough over the head they can still learn something. In rooting out and burning up the entrenched bad habits of yesteryear, the odds are improved for a better tomorrow.
This represents the “silver lining” side of things. Next we’ll take a closer look at the AIG mess and plunge into the dark cloud.
http://www.taipanpublishinggroup.com/taipan-daily-031009.html
About the Author
Justice Litle is editorial director for Taipan Publishing Group. He is also a regular contributor to Taipan Daily, a free investing and trading e-letter, and editor of Taipan’s Safe Haven Investor. He is the founder and editor of Taipan’s newest research advisory service, Justice Litle’s Macro Trader.
|
|
★vintage/antique GENERAL ELECTRIC PORCELAIN ORNATE CLOCK electric FASHION shelf $47.50 |
|
|
1957 General Electric floor cleaner and polisher at work photo print Ad $8.99 |
|
|
Retro 1960’s GENERAL ELECTRIC Digital Flip Alarm Clock w/Red Lighted Dial WORKS! $9.99 |
|
|
Vintage Art Deco General Electric Tube Radio * Vintage GE Tube Radio * Bakelite $25.00 |
|
|
General Electric Flash bar II $0.01 |
|
|
1953 General Electric “Electricity Around Us” Comic $7.95 |
|
|
1963 GENERAL ELECTRIC and TIDE ad (# 2315) $16.95 |
|
|
General Electric 55-501463G005 Coil Series A NEW-NO BOX $470.77 |
|
|
General Electric 55-B22A Coil USED $109.00 |
|
|
General Electric CR215GH61 Limit Switch Head NEW-NO BOX $44.00 |
|
|
General Electric CR215GH42 Limit Switch Head USED $30.00 |
|
|
1956 General Electric “Science in Your Future” Comic $6.95 |
|
|
General Electric CR215GR2 2 Pack Limit Switch Recep NEW-NO BOX $15.00 |
|
|
General Electric CR215GH66 Limit Switch Head USED $28.00 |
|
|
General Electric 6275081G26 Coil NEW-NO BOX $523.77 |
|
|
WORKING! Retro Flip Clock Orange General Electric Vintage Model 8114 $59.99 |
|
|
1955 General Electric “Adventures in Electonics” Comic $7.95 |
|
|
1953 General Electric model 546 plastic Clock-Radio World’s most useful print Ad $8.99 |
|
|
1962 General Electric model P-8523/P-865/P-9051/P-860 transistor radios print Ad $8.99 |
|
|
1949 Joan Edwards sings over General Electric natural tone radios print art ad $8.99 |
|
|
Old Vintage Antique General Electric Motor 1/5 HP 1725 RPM 1 Phase Runs Good! $29.00 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC GE K573 5K49SN8078 3 PHASE AC MOTOR 575V 1.5HP 1725RPM 45985 $126.50 |
|
|
‘57 General Electric “Engineering in Your Future” Comic $7.95 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Lighted 2-Way Make-up Mirror Model B1 IM-1 $14.99 |
|
|
GE General Electric Circuit Breaker TEB132050 _ 50 amp 40 C $15.00 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC HEAD LAMP #904-A VINTAGE USED geo451 $9.99 |
|
|
1964 General Electric Refrigerator Ice Tray ad (# 4589) $16.95 |
|
|
Vintage 1953 General Electric “Man-Made Magic!” Comic $7.95 |
|
|
1930 General Electric Silent Hostess treasure book $9.99 |
|
|
NEW CR120K22002AA GENERAL ELECTRIC RELAY, G.E. $56.00 |
|
|
General Electric Replacer Ballast Kit 150 Watt 120/208/240//277V GERB15SOH NIB $84.99 |
|
|
1955 General Electric “Adventures in Jet Power” Comic $7.95 |
|
|
GE GENERAL ELECTRIC PANEL Slightly Used $397.00 |
|
|
1951 GE General Electric AM Clock Radio ad CMYSTORE $8.99 |
|
|
1964 General Electric Spray, Steam and Dry iron ad (# 4595) $16.95 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC AC MOTOR 200HP 1180RPM 3PH 8155Z TYPE K 440V 31091 $2,156.00 |
|
|
Vintage 1950 Full Size Zippo Lighter G.E. General Electric $64.00 |
|
|
1964 General Electric dishwasher ad (#5414) $16.95 |
|
|
1964 General Electric Washer ad (#5429) $16.95 |
|
|
VINTAGE GENERAL ELECTRIC SOLID STATE AM RADIO $21.99 |
|
|
General Electric Refrigerator Steel Deco Art Ad 1931 $7.00 |
|
|
TOP ROD PLUNGER LIMIT SWITCH CR115L1C GENERAL ELECTRIC $59.95 |
|
|
Vintage GE General Electric 9 Cup Percolator Coffee Maker $14.95 |
|
|
GE GENERAL ELECTRIC 5U4GB/5AS4A TUBE $4.99 |
|
|
VINTAGE GENERAL ELECTRIC AUTOMATIC BLANKET OWNERS MANUAL & WARRANTY REGISTRATION $2.99 |
|
|
General Electric 5K49KN6173 1/3 HP AC Motor $500.00 |
|
|
1950 4 SUPERB GENERAL ELECTRIC LIGHT BULB ADS ON THE SA $6.99 |
|
|
1950 4 SUPERB GENERAL ELECTRIC LIGHT BULB ADS ON THE SA $6.99 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC CR305S002AEA USPP CR305S002AEA $144.90 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC Super 7 series demonstrator #3001 Denver CO orig slide 10/91 $2.25 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Iron Catelog No. 17F29 $1.99 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Dual Speaker AM/FM Radio Alarm Clock in Wooden Case $25.00 |
|
|
General-Electric TDT3361 30a 600v Double Throw switch $395.25 |
|
|
1957 General Electric High-low Bulb ad (# 4719) $16.95 |
|
|
VTG ALEXANDER GENERAL ELECTRIC FL SCREWDRIVER FOR ALL YOUR CONTRIL NEEDS GEZ6612 $7.99 |
|
|
1959 General Electric Stereophonic Phonographs ad (# 4442) $16.95 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC 1990 ALCO GE Original Slide $2.50 |
|
|
HS213 General Electric Developments 1941 Radio TV Xray Aviation AC Welding ADV $34.99 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Exposure Meter Type PR-3 $4.95 |
|
|
1960 GENERAL ELECTRIC ad (#1701) $16.95 |
|
|
1960 General Electric automatic skillet ad (#5492) $16.95 |
|
|
1960 General Electric Thinline Room air conditioners ad (# 5184) $16.95 |
|
|
1960 General Electric Toast-R-Oven and other small appliances ad (#5832) $16.95 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC 55-153678G2 CONTACT KIT SIZE 4 NIB!!! $475.00 |
|
|
Antique General Electric Alternating Current Voltmeter- “AS IS” $200.00 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC 171B3939G4 RECTIFIER MODULE NIB!!! $65.00 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC 080-B10V NSPP 080B10V $25.00 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC 080B11V NSPP 080B11V $25.00 |
|
|
ANTIQUE GE GENERAL ELECTRIC TABLE FAN BRASS COPPER 3 SPEEDS NW AS-IS PARTS ONLY $73.99 |
|
|
VINTAGE RADIO COLLECTION-SONY TR-730 – WESTINGHOUSE-GENERAL ELECTRIC $35.00 |
|
|
1961 General Electric Refrrigerator- Freez ad (#4288) $16.95 |
|
|
General Electric Mr. Magoo Vintage 1960’s Life Magazine Print Advertisement Lot $5.29 |
|
|
2 – General Electric 89LL 12 Volt Automotive Bulbs park/license/courtesy/hood $7.50 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Fan News #12 (Buffalo News????)….See Photos… $160.00 |
|
|
1939 General Electric ad, GE, attic treasures $6.99 |
|
|
P & M APPLIANCE COMPANY Match cover Belpre OH General Electric Refigerators $3.99 |
|
|
General Electric 1 pole 15 amp snap-in breaker $0.99 |
|
|
1940 General Electric ad, GE, refrigerator $6.49 |
|
|
1940 General Electric ad, Refrigerator, Mom & sons $6.49 |
|
|
1940 General Electric ad, GE, refrigerator $6.49 |
|
|
General Electric Stove — 1920’s $600.00 |
|
|
General Electric 1 pole 30 amp snap-in breaker $0.99 |
|
|
1941 General Electric ad, Refrigerator, Dad in apron $6.49 |
|
|
1943 General Electric ad, Short Wave Radio Tube $7.49 |
|
|
1946 General Electric ad, Musaphonic Radio Phonograph $6.49 |
|
|
1945 General Electric ad, FM Radio Phil Baker accordion $6.49 |
|
|
GENERAL ELECTRIC TRANSISTOR RADIO MODEL 7-2857A $9.99 |
|
|
General Electric 2 pole 40 amp snap-in breaker $1.99 |
|
|
1965 General Electric air conditioner ad (#5915) $16.95 |
|
|
GE General Electric Circuit Breaker TED134020WL 3P 20A $88.00 |
|
|
Vintage 1948 Retro GE General Electric Pop Up Toaster Cream Bakelite Chrome $39.99 |
|
|
General Electric Vintage TV 1960’s Life Magazine Print Advertisement Reagan Lot $5.29 |
|
|
Cookbook, GE The New Art General Electric Kitchen Institute 1937 112 pages C54 $5.00 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Portable Record Player V638H Automatic VERY NICE 9.99 $20.45 |
|
|
Vintage General Electric Help-2 40 Channel 2-Way Emergency CB Radio $9.75 |
|
|
Quantity 2 – GE 9004 Halogen Headlight Replacement Bulb $4.95 |
|
|
Vintage 1960s NIB Automatic Clothes Brush (Lint remover) General Electric Works $29.99 |
|
|
1946 General Electric Radio Phonograph ad, Musaphonic $6.49 |
|
|
Retro General Electric Mosaic Tile Wall Clock – WORKS! $25.00 |
|
|
1947 General Electric Radio Phonograph Rise Stevens Ad $12.50 |
|
|
Cuisinart ICE-30BC Pure Indulgence 2-Quart Automatic Frozen Yogurt, Sorbet, and Ice Cream Maker $73.95 … |
|
|
Aroma AWK-115S Hot H20 X-Press 1-1/2-Liter Cordless Water Kettle $30.99 The Hot H20 X-Press from Aroma provides boiling water in a matter of minutes. The 1.5-liter capacity is ideal for a variety of uses–hot tea, soups, instant coffees, oatmeal, hot chocolate, noodles, baby formula and more. Once water reaches a boil, the kettle will automatically shut off and lifts off its base for easy, cord-free pouring. The beautiful polished stainless steel finish looks grea… |
|
|
GE MSWF Refrigerator Water Filter … |
|
|
Ray Bradbury’s Electric Grandmother Plot Summary for Electric Grandmother, The (1982) (TV) To a family whose children are traumatized by the death of their mother, help comes in a most bizarre way. They receive three pieces, that when joined together, give a recording for an offer for an electric grandmother. They go to a bizarre factory, where they customize their new grandmother, and within a short time, she arrives. The android i… |
|
|
Disney Presents: Main Street Electrical Parade – Farewell Season $16.95 Catch the spark after dark at Disneyland Park. And say farewell to one of the Magic Kingdom’s most celebrated traditions – The Main Street Electrical Parade. Where else, but in The Main Stree Electrical Parade, could you see an illuminated 40-foot-long fire-breathing dragon? And hear the energy of its legendary melody one last time? It’s unforgettable after-dark magic that will glow in your heart … |
|
|
My Dinner With Andre (SP Mode) $19.98 The sheer audacity of My Dinner with Andre drew throngs of curious filmgoers who made the film the most talked-about art-house hit of 1981. After all, who’d ever heard of a movie consisting of nearly two hours of nonstop dinner conversation? Ah… but this isn’t just any conversation–it’s the kind of mesmerizing, soul-searching, life-affirming exploration that we feel privileged to listen to, and… |
|
|
River Monsters Season 3 $9.98 All seven episodes from the third season–including “The Mutilator,” “Flesh Ripper,” “Silent Assassin,” “Chainsaw Predator,” and “Jungle Killer”–are featured in a two-disc set. 3 1/2 hrs. total. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo; Subtitles: English (SDH); bonus programs. **7 episodes on 2 discs. 3 1/2 hrs.**… |
|
|
Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) – Zoom Tour Live $6.91 This superlative concert video is a godsend for fans of Electric Light Orchestra, since ELO’s Zoom tour was cut short, sadly, because of lackluster ticket sales. Judging from this tour-opening performance (in May 2001, at the CBS studios in Los Angeles), those canceled gigs were a major loss, because Jeff Lynne’s revamped ELO is in top form, playing six new songs from Zoom (ELO’s first releas… |
|
|
In the Electric Mist $2.05 Based on the book series by James Lee Burke, In the Electric Mist tackles murder, mobsters, Hollywood drama⦠and apparitions of long-dead confederate soldiers. The film begins with Detective Dave Robicheaux (Tommy Lee Jones) investigating the murder of a young woman in his small parish town while dealing with the influx of irresponsible Hollywood star Elrod Sykes (Peter Sarsgaard). While fil… |
|
|
Emeril’s Big Easy Bold Coffee, K-Cup for Keurig Brewers … |