Industrials

Industrials Articles

One of the most difficult parts of trading is timing the markets, although in a bull market this is less of a problem. But it can be particularly difficult calling the market bottom in the middle of...
GE has been the subject of harsh criticism over the past year, and not without reason. At this point it has to do something to stop the bleeding, and changing the board may be its best option.
The S&P 500 has more than quadrupled since its bottom nearly nine years ago. So how does this stack up against GE?
GE has announced that it will need to restate 2016 and 2017 results. The conglomerate's relationship with Wall Street, which could not get worse, just did.
Caterpillar is launching a new smartphone, the Cat S61, at this week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The phone includes thermal imaging technology and costs less than a bulldozer.
With the exception of the first week of the year, GE has been the worst performing Dow stock every week. The short week just behind us was no exception.
General Electric posted a small gain last week, but not one large enough to shake off its ranking as the worst performing stock among the Dow 30. Shares added less than 1% last week.
Deere & Co. reported adjusted earnings Friday morning that beat consensus estimate and raised second-quarter and full-year revenue and income guidance.
General Electric held onto its ranking as the worst performing Dow stock for the year to date. Overall, though, it performed better than 20 other Dow stocks in the market's horrible week.
GE has hit a snag in its development of the GE9X jet engine that will power the new Boeing 777X. The first test flight of the plane was due at the end of this year, but may be pushed in February 2019.
Aluminum products maker Arconic beat analysts' estimates for profits and revenues this morning, but the company's guidance was soft and investors had reason to sell again Monday.
While GE did not drum up any particularly bad news last week, it remains the worst performing stock on the Dow. That led one analyst to predict the company would be dropped from the index.
It seems like the world just cannot get enough of Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway. The conglomerate saw its price targets raised on both share classes at UBS.
A Deutsche Bank analyst thinks General Electric may get kicked out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. It is the only original member of the index left.
Steel pipe producer IPSCO Tubulars intends to sell more than 23 million shares priced to result in an initial public offering valued up to about $615 million.