Shares of General Electric (NYSE:GE) are down more than 10% today after the company reported earnings for the first quarter. Revenue came in at $17.04 billion, which beat analyst expectations of $16.85 billion by about one percent. Meanwhile, earnings per share (EPS) came in at 24 cents, which beat expectations of 18 cents by 33%. While revenue and earnings beat analyst estimates, free cash flow (FCF) is what’s sending GE stock down today. FCF for the quarter tallied in at -$880 million while analysts were expecting -$816.5 million.
General Electric also reiterated its plan to split into three separate companies by 2024. Then, the company will focus on aviation efforts while spinning off its healthcare and energy businesses as separate entities.
For guidance, the company expects full-year adjusted EPS to come in between $2.80 and $3.50. Meanwhile, GE estimates full-year FCF to be between $5.5 billion to $6.5 billion. However, the company warned earlier this year that supply chain challenges could persist into the second half of the year. GE cautioned that “the magnitude of these challenges likely present pressure to overall growth, profit and free cash flow through the first quarter and the first half, beyond typically expected seasonality.”
With that in mind, let’s take a look at how Wall Street analysts view General Electric going forward.
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