General Motors
Co on Thursday reported higher-than-expected quarterly earnings, citing
strong results in North America and an improved performance in Europe.
The automaker's shares were up 3.5 percent at $33.30 in early trading
after rising as high as $33.68. That is still only just above their
2010 initial public offering price of $33, despite three straight
quarters of record-breaking pretax profits.
Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra has stepped up efforts to
persuade skeptical investors that GM can deliver consistently strong
profits - and return billions to shareholders - through the ups and
downs of the industry's sales cycles.
First-quarter net income more than doubled to $2 billion, or $1.24 a share.
Excluding a one-time expense for litigation settlements,
earnings were $1.26 a share, well ahead of analysts' expectations of
$1.00.
The company said pretax income, excluding one-time items, was a record for the first quarter.GM said it still expected full-year earnings of $5.25 and $5.75 a share, excluding special items, up from $5.02 in 2015.
Revenue for the first quarter rose 4.5 percent to $37.3
billion. Adjusted profit margins increased to 7.1 percent of revenue
from 5.8 percent a year earlier.
North America accounted for 85 per cent of GM's earnings
before interest and taxes, reflecting robust profits from sport utility
vehicles and pickup trucks.
Margins from the region, however, fell to 8.7 percent from
8.8 percent a year earlier. Chief Financial Officer Chuck Stevens
attributed the decline to restructuring costs and more U.S. union
members taking packages to retire.
Stevens said the company still expected North American margins of more than 10 percent for 2016.
In Europe, GM broke even, reversing a year-earlier loss of $200 million.
Stevens affirmed the company's target for 8 percent profit
margins in Europe over the next several years, but said the possibility
that the United Kingdom will leave the European Union is a concern.
"What does that do to pound sterling?" he said. "What does that do to
business, and business transactions?"
The automaker narrowed losses in South America. Income from joint ventures in China was flat at $500 million for the quarter.
The Barron’s financial newspaper projected this week the
share prices of GM and rival Ford Motor could rise at least 25 percent
in the next year, with U.S. auto sales likely to come in stronger than
many investors fear.
The stocks of both companies appear cheap, Barron’s said. GM
and Ford trade at 5.6 times and 6.6 times expected 2016 earnings,
respectively. The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index has a forward
price-to-earnings ratio of 17.
Shares of GM and Ford have been under pressure because of
investor fear of a downturn in the U.S. auto market as well as economic
weakness in China. But investors are forgetting several positive
factors, Barron’s said. For one thing, the automakers are much leaner
than in previous years, which could help profitability.
Also, while U.S sales could slip from the first quarter’s
pace of 17 million-plus units a year, they are likely to plateau in a
range between 16.5 million and 17 million vehicles annually, the
publication said. Both companies have said they would at least break
even in the event annual sales fell to about 11 million.
Healthcare costs for retired unionized workers are no longer
an obligation, Barron’s noted. The costs have been shifted to a trust
fund run by the United Auto Workers that the automakers paid billions of
dollars to create.
Data from Reuters were used to report this story.
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