Topic: How To Invest

You have recommended General Electric as a buy. My research shows that it has a high debt-to-equity ratio. Is this a concern? I bought GE for the dividend (about 3%). What are your thoughts concerning this investment? Thanks.

Article Excerpt

General Electric, $15.71, symbol GE on New York (Shares outstanding: 10.6 billion; Market cap: $166.9 billion), has $339.4 million in long-term debt. That’s a high 181.7% of its $120.5 million in shareholders’ equity. However, debt-to-equity ratio is just one way to assess a company’s financial condition. The conventional idea used to be that a debt-to-equity ratio should be less than 1.0; that is, debt should be less than equity. But the conventional definition of equity only includes capital invested in a company, plus earnings that were retained in the business rather than paid out. This is not a particularly accurate way to look at many of today’s companies. That’s because the main value of many is in assets that they have built from a tiny base. In cases like this, it may make more sense to compare a company’s debt to its market capitalization, or “market cap” — the value of all of its outstanding shares. Market cap tells you…