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With revenue, earnings, and cash flow all under pressure, General Electric decided to cut its quarterly dividend all the way to $0.01 per share.
GE Aerospace (NYSE:GE) shares are trading higher premarket on Thursday after it reported fourth-quarter adjusted revenue growth of 16% year-over-year to $9.879 billion and GAAP revenue of $10.812 ...
However, in 2013, a 0.001 percent tax on all stock market transactions was imposed. [2] In 2013, the Ministry of Finance announced that the government intended to repeal a 10 percent capital gains tax imposed on mergers and acquisitions the year earlier, as well as a planned tax on cash dividends, and refund investors who paid it. [3]
The company also announced a 30% dividend increase and said it intends to repurchase upward of $7 billion worth of shares in 2025. ... *Stock Advisor returns as of February 3, 2025.
General Electric was a longtime "dividend aristocrat" (a company with a long history of maintaining dividend payments to shareholders). Until 2017, the company had never cut dividends for 119 years before a 50% dividend reduction from 24 cents per share to 12 cents per share. [ 168 ]
PEG is a widely employed indicator of a stock's possible true value. Similar to PE ratios, a lower PEG means that the stock is undervalued more. It is favored by many over the price/earnings ratio because it also accounts for growth. See also PVGO.
At this point, the stock has moved very far very fast. That's highlighted by the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of 32 versus the average for the SPDR S&P Aerospace & Defense ETF of around 27.
It seems as though over the past year, General Electric (GE) has fallen at a very steadfast pace. After slashing their dividend in November 2017 from 24 cents to 12 cents, getting kicked off the ...