Jumat, 16 Agustus 2019

GE rebounds after CEO share purchases, Wall Street analysts come to company's defense - CNBC

General Electric bounced back Friday after the CEO shored up confidence by purchasing a bulk of company shares, and analysts defended the industrial giant.

GE's stock was up more than 6% on Friday morning following its biggest drop since April 2008 a day earlier. GE shares had tanked 11% on Thursday.

The stock began its downward spiral Thursday morning after Harry Markopolos, best-known for pointing out irregularities with Bernie Madoff's investment strategy years before the ponzi scheme was exposed, published a report accusing GE of fraudulent financial statements.

Culp, who took over the struggling industrial conglomerate last year, bought 252,200 shares for $7.93 each, according to a Thursday evening filing with the SEC. The CEO has roughly doubled his holding of GE shares this week.

In the 175-page report, Markopolos accused GE of $38 billion in accounting fraud — "bigger than Enron and WorldCom combined." He outlined a "long history" of accounting fraud at GE, dating to as early as 1995, when it was run by Jack Welch.

"It's going to make this company probably file for bankruptcy," Markopolos told CNBC's "Squawk on the Street" Thursday. "WorldCom and Enron lasted about four months. ... we'll see how GE does."

A U.S. hedge fund, that Markopolos wouldn't name, paid Markopolos to conduct the report. Markopolos told CNBC that he was getting a "decent percentage" of profits that the hedge fund would make from betting against GE.

Culp, who is the former CEO of Danaher, said the accusations were false, and driven by incentives to profit off of GE's stock drop.

"GE will always take any allegation of financial misconduct seriously. But this is market manipulation – pure and simple," he said in a statement. "Mr. Markopolos's report contains false statements of fact and these claims could have been corrected if he had checked them with GE before publishing the report."

Leslie Seidman, a GE board director and chair of its audit committee, also pushed back on the Markopolos report, which she said contained "numerous novel interpretations and downright mistakes about the actual accounting requirements."

"In his own words, he stands to personally financially benefit from today's significant market reaction to his report," she said. "He is selectively front-running widely reported regulatory processes and rigorous investigations without the benefit of any access to GE's books and records."

Wall Street sides with GE

Equity analysts didn't seem convinced that Markopolos had a bullet-proof case, either.

Nick Heymann, co-group head of global industrial infrastructure at William Blair, said it was hard to believe that GE had fraudulently misrepresented its financial reporting — especially after engaging with several regulatory reviews of its accounting and financial disclosures for over two years.

"As such, we tend to find the effort to portray GE's current financial condition assuming all three alleged cash or noncash charges totaling ~$38 billion should have been previously recognized is at best disingenuous and at worst highly inaccurate," Heymann said in a note to clients Thursday.

Citi research analyst and managing director Andrew Kaplowitz also backed GE, telling clients that while analysts were "still digesting" it, the report had "sufficient shortcomings" and Citi continues to believe in Culp's ability to improve the company over time. Kaplowitz pointed to Culp's share purchases in the open market Thursday, which reflected "high conviction that the allegations do not represent incremental unknown challenges."

"The 175 page report seems sensationalized and according to press reports the author appears to have a financial interest in a GE stock decline given a partnership with an undisclosed hedge fund," Kaplowitz said in a note to clients Thursday. "Overall, we think that some of the allegations were already known and others 'known unknowns,' which lead us to retain our conviction in the potential for share price outperformance over time."

Jim Corridore, equity analyst at CFRA Research, highlighted Markopolos and the anonymous hedge fund's motives to profit from the stock's decline.

"We have confidence in the increased openness in GE's accounting under Larry Culp's leadership after years of financial opaqueness under Jeff Immelt, when GE's problems were created," Corridore said. "We think GE is moving towards improving its balance sheet and think it has ample liquidity and access to capital markets to continue running its businesses and restructuring."

The struggling industrial conglomerate abruptly removed its former CEO and chairman John Flannery last year after only a year on the job and installed Culp as his successor. Flannery had been appointed in August 2017, taking the reins from Jeff Immelt as GE's stock steadily eroded.

To be sure, some on Wall Street still have questions after the report.

Jay Gelb, managing director and senior insurance equity research analyst at Barclays, said he was not currently in a position to say whether Markopolos's GE shortfall reserve estimate was reasonable, "although it is certainly concerning."

One area of Markopolos' report focuses on is GE's long-term care insurance unit, for which the company had to boost reserves by $15 billion last year. By examining the filings of GE's counterparties in this business, Markopolos alleges that GE is hiding massive losses that will only increase as policyholders grow older. He claims that GE has filed false statements to regulators on the unit. Separately, he goes on to find issues with GE's accounting on its oil and gas business Baker Hughes.

Bank of America Andrew Obin said the allegations appear to cover similar ground as ongoing investigations by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Department of Justice and existing shareholder lawsuits. While the firm's valuation already assumes meaningful downside in GE's long-term insurance business, given the current levels of U.S. interest rates, they now have a more "conservative assumption around the discount rate of insurance."

Bank of America lowered its price target by $1 on Friday, citing ongoing market pressure on growth and margins in its power business, "execution issues" outside of power, and bigger-than-expected capital requirements at GE Capital.

— CNBC's Michael Bloom contributed reporting. 

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/16/ge-rebounds-after-ceo-share-purchases-analysts-defend-company.html

2019-08-16 14:13:08Z
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CEO Of Cathay Pacific Airways Resigns, Amid Hong Kong Protests - NPR

Cathay Pacific CEO Rupert Hogg, at a news conference in Hong Kong in 2017, announced his resignation on Friday. AFP Contributor/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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AFP Contributor/AFP/Getty Images

The CEO of Cathay Pacific Airways, Hong Kong's flagship carrier, stepped down on Friday, following a chaotic week that began with thousands of pro-democracy protesters overwhelming Hong Kong International Airport.

CEO Rupert Hogg led Cathay Pacific Group for three years, but on Friday the company announced he was leaving.

"These have been challenging weeks for the airline," Hogg said, adding that he took responsibility as the leader of the company.

His resignation comes after Beijing exerted pressure on the carrier. Protesters, initially spurred by an extradition bill in June, stormed one of the world's busiest airports, disrupting flights this week.

Critics denounced Cathay Pacific for following the orders of China's aviation regulator under the Communist Party. It fired two pilots on Wednesday in connection with the protests and threatened to sack more employees who supported the demonstrations.

John Slosar, the company's chairman, said Friday that recent events "put our reputation and brand under pressure" and that new leadership could "reset confidence."

Slosar zeroed in on Beijing's promise of a "one country, two systems" framework, which was supposed to give the former British colony "a high degree of autonomy" for 50 years. "Cathay Pacific is fully committed to Hong Kong under the principle of 'One Country Two Systems' as enshrined in the Basic Law," Slosar said. "We are confident that Hong Kong will have a great future."

Protesters now demand an independent inquiry into police brutality at rallies and the right to directly elect their leaders without approval from Beijing.

Beijing's State Council office for Hong Kong and Macau Affairs said the protests showed "signs of terrorism." China's official state media has blamed the unrest on thugs and foreign interference, especially the United States.

Augustus Tang was appointed to replace Hogg, according to Cathay Pacific. Paul Loo, chief customer and commercial officer, also resigned.

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https://www.npr.org/2019/08/16/751686980/ceo-of-cathay-pacific-airways-resigns-amid-hong-kong-protests

2019-08-16 12:47:00Z
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The morning after: 5% bounce for GE as sell-side defends - Seeking Alpha

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  1. The morning after: 5% bounce for GE as sell-side defends  Seeking Alpha
  2. Madoff whistleblower claims GE is a bigger fraud than Enron  Fox Business
  3. GE stock has worst day in 11 years after Madoff whistleblower calls it a bigger fraud than Enron  CNN
  4. GE Left Itself Open to Short-Seller’s Critique  Bloomberg
  5. General Electric Rebounds as CEO Culp Buys $2M in Shares Following Fraud Claim  TheStreet.com
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://seekingalpha.com/news/3492535-morning-5-percent-bounce-ge-sell-side-defends

2019-08-16 11:45:00Z
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Fed may not have the firepower to save the economy if a recession is coming - CNBC

President Donald Trump wants the Federal Reserve to help head off a feared economic slowdown, but it's not clear the central bank has enough firepower left to do so.

Besides, some economists say, there's really not much reason for the Fed to act any more aggressively than it already plans, considering that growth signs remain intact, though dinged a little bit by worries over tariffs and a slowdown in some other areas outside the U.S.

"Federal Reserve officials have some explaining to do when it comes to cutting interest rates and driving down the yields on safe investments like Treasury bonds and notes to near record low levels," Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at MUFG, said in a note following a raft of positive economic data on Thursday.

"They don't need to explain their rate cuts to voters or to the Trump economics team, but they will have to explain themselves to the history books. The Fed's interest rate cut looks more out of line than ever given the strength of the economy," he added. "Recession? What recession? That's what we want to know."

Still, Trump continues to clamor for rate cuts and the market anticipates at least two more before the end of the year. That will leave the Fed with only scant room to cut further, as it currently is targeting its benchmark rate between 2% and 2.25%.

The question, though, is whether the Fed can even save the U.S. from a soft patch or worse. Wall Street saw its worst day of the year Wednesday, as the Dow industrials fell 3% while the bond market, albeit briefly, saw the 2-year Treasury note yield rise above the 10-year, a sign that has pointed to recessions in the past.

By itself, the Fed may have a hard time stemming such fears, following a decade in which the central bank has been pretty successful in stepping in to save the day during market queasiness.

Behind the curve

"We're in a little bit of new water," said Lisa Shalett, chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. "The bond market is telling you, 'Listen stock market, you're being too ebullient, you're being too optimistic. You're putting too much faith in a Fed that is behind the curve and too much faith in a president who doesn't actually hold all the cards.'"

The Fed in 2019 has sought to reposition itself from an intention to continue raising rates this year to holding a "patient" stance before changing policy to one that now is actively assuring markets that it will do what is needed to keep the decade-old expansion going.

However, its 25 basis point rate cut on July 31 has been treated with relative ambivalence — whereas such a move normally would cause the yield curve to steepen, the gap actually has contracted to the point of the inversion that so startled markets Wednesday.

"The key thing we're watching and the key thing we tell our clients to watch is you need the long end of the bond market to go up. That's when you'll know it's safe to go back in the water," Shalett said. "As long as the bond market is worried about recession or worried about the Fed being behind the curve, there's not a lot the Fed can do."

A need to be 'very, very aggressive'

Steepening the yield curve might require some more dramatic action than merely quarter-point cuts.

The dreaded inversion quickly reverted and the curve between the 2- and 10-year steepened somewhat Thursday. However, a round of disappointing economic data, or, more likely, another Trump acceleration of the trade war via tweet could cause market havoc again.

"It's very remarkable that on July 31 when the Fed cut interest rates, the 2-10 spread was over 20 basis points, and after they cut it went negative within two weeks or so," said economist Michael Pento, founder of Pento Portfolio Strategies. "That's telling me the Fed has to be very, very aggressive — maybe a 75 basis point cut would be the minimum to get the long-term rate rising."

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on "Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy" in Washington, July 10, 2019.

Erin Scott | Reuters

Traders are not anticipating that kind of move, though the chances of a 50 basis point reduction in September moved up to 33% Thursday, according to the CME's tracker of market probability. The market is projecting the funds rate to keep falling until it hits around 1.04% in early 2021, which would represent a full point cut and then some from the current target range.

The worries among some Fed officials is that if they start cutting now, there won't be much left if a more serious downturn hits.

"The Fed can act quickly, but the low level of interest rates limits how much stimulus they can provide," Nomura economist Lewis Alexander said in a note.

"The Fed could overestimate the strength of the economy and keep policy too 'tight,'" he added. "This
has happened, on several occasions in the past. That said, the Fed seems intent on avoiding this mistake. "

Indeed, markets expect central bankers to remain confident they can keep the economy moving, even if doubts are rising in the markets and at the White House.

"Markets can move pretty far pretty fast and get ahead of themselves, so I guess I don't think there's a necessity to rush to ease policy," said Bill English, former head of monetary affairs at the Fed and now a professor at the Yale School of Management. "Powell has been very clear that they're going to be looking at the data and be data driven, and they're going to do the right thing to keep the expansion going."

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/15/trump-wants-fed-rate-cuts-unclear-if-they-would-help.html

2019-08-16 10:54:48Z
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CEO of Cathay Pacific resigns following pressure by Beijing on the Hong Kong carrier over staff participation in protests - Stuff.co.nz

The CEO of Cathay Pacific Airways has resigned following pressure by Beijing on the Hong Kong carrier over participation by some of its employees in anti government protests.

Cathay Pacific said Rupert Hogg resigned Friday "to take responsibility" following "recent events."

Cathay Pacific Airbus A330-300. The CEO of the airline has resigned following pressure by Beijing on the Hong Kong carrier over participation by some of its employees in anti government protests.

SUPPLIED

Cathay Pacific Airbus A330-300. The CEO of the airline has resigned following pressure by Beijing on the Hong Kong carrier over participation by some of its employees in anti government protests.

The company chairman, John Slosar, said in a statement the airline needed new management because events had "called into question" its commitment to safety and security.

On Monday, Hogg threatened employees with "disciplinary consequences" if they took part in "illegal protests.'

READ MORE:
* Hong Kong protesters call for boycott of Kiwi-made Mulan over star's support for police
* Hong Kong protesters to withdraw all their money from ATMs
* Travellers heading to Hong Kong told to check insurance policies
* Hong Kong protesters apologetic, but determined to fight on
* Satellite photos appear to show Chinese troops near Hong Kong

Last week, China's aviation regulator said Cathay Pacific employees who "support or take part in illegal protests, violent actions, or overly radical behavior" are banned from staffing flights to mainland China.

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2019-08-16 09:57:00Z
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Kamis, 15 Agustus 2019

Bernie Madoff whistleblower says GE is a bigger fraud than Enron - CNN

Markopolos said in a report released Thursday that GE was hiding nearly $40 billion of losses in its insurance business. He said this is the largest case of accounting fraud he and his team have investigated.
"In fact, GE's $38 billion in accounting fraud amounts to over 40% of GE's market capitalization, making it far more serious than either the Enron or WorldCom accounting frauds," Markopolos wrote in the report, referring to the scandals that eventually helped bankrupt energy giant Enron in 2001 and long-distance telco WorldCom in 2002.
GE strongly denied Markopolos' allegations.
"The claims made by Mr. Markopolos are meritless," GE said in a statement, adding that it "has never met, spoken to or had contact with Mr. Markopolos, and we are extremely disappointed that an individual with no direct knowledge of GE would choose to make such serious and unsubstantiated claims."
Markopolos made several comparisons to Enron in his report and also on a new website with the URL www.gefraud.com. He accused GE of using what he dubbed "the 'GEnron' playbook."
"GE has been running a decades-long accounting fraud by only providing top line revenue and bottom line profits for its business units and getting away with leaving out cost of goods sold" in addition to various other expenses," Markopolos claims.
He also took issue with how GE accounts for its majority stake in oil services firm Baker Hughes and accused the company of hiding more than $9 billion in losses in its separately traded BHGE (BHGE) unit.
Shares of GE (GE) tumbled 13% on the news. The stock is still up 7.5% this year though, as new CEO Larry Culp has been busy selling off non-core assets to shore up cash.
Those sales may also help turn GE around by making the notoriously complex company leaner and more focused on the power and renewable energy, aviation and healthcare businesses that continue to have solid growth prospects.
GE could sell its stake in dozens of startups
GE was not immediately available for further comment about the Markopolos claims. But in its statement, the company took issue with Markopolos' allegations about accounting in its insurance unit, saying that "current reserves are well-supported for our portfolio characteristics."
GE also defended how it accounts for its BHGE stake and added that it has "a strong liquidity position" -- with ample cash and access to credit lines.
The company noted that "Mr. Markopolos openly acknowledges that he is compensated by unnamed hedge funds" and added that these funds are "financially motivated" to profit from short selling the stock, a move that could push shares lower and "create unnecessary volatility."
Still, Markopolos points out in his report that he is not making any investment recommendations, adding that "GE's current and past employees are the victims here as are GE's lenders, vendors, and customers all of whom have to deal with the aftermath of an accounting fraud."
Markopolos is far from the only one critical of GE's accounting.
Activist shareholder firm CtW said in an April letter to GE's lead independent board director Thomas Horton that "misguided capital allocation strategies and multiple shareholder derivative lawsuits...cast doubt over the company's financial health."
CtW also took issue with GE's continued relationship with auditing firm KPMG, which has been reviewing GE's books for more than a century. Several other activist shareholders also urged GE to dump KPMG, and GE said in December that its audit committee will consider making a change -- but not until 2020 at the earliest.
KPMG declined to comment about its business relationship with GE because of "client confidentiality requirements."

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/15/investing/general-electric-harry-markopolos-whistleblower-accounting/index.html

2019-08-15 15:53:00Z
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Here's why Madoff whistleblower says GE is a bigger fraud than Enron - Yahoo Finance

Shares of General Electric are falling today after Madoff whistleblower Harry Markopolos targeted the company in a new report, saying it has been hiding the extent of its problems in fraudulent financial statements. Yahoo Finance's Ethan Wolff-Mann talks with Julie Hyman and Adam Shapiro as well as Lending Tree's chief economist, Tendayi Kapfidze and Ramsey Smith, ALEX.fyi Founder.

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2019-08-15 15:48:00Z
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