General Motors swung to a loss in the fourth quarter on an increasingly difficult environment in China, but still topped profit and revenue expectations on Wall Street
The automaker estimates its struggling China business will cost $5 billion, but it isn't giving up on the country yet.
Restructuring charges led to a fourth-quarter net loss. The result marred what was a relatively strong year for GM.
General Motors Company (NYSE:GM) shares are trading lower in the premarket session on Tuesday. The automotive behemoth reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.92 in the fourth quarter, beating the street view of $1.
GM faces China setback but beats expectations, offers generous profit-sharing to workers, and navigates U.S. regulations.
Expects to forecast $1B in annual run rate savings from ending Cruise robo-taxi program. Says Cruise employees to be fully integrated into the
General Motors posted better fourth quarter revenue and adjusted earnings than analysts had expected, as it recorded billions in one-time charges because of recent changes to the automaker's business plans.
General Motors (GM) is scheduled to announce Q4 earnings on Tuesday, January 28th, before the market opens, with analysts expecting a double-digit growth in pro
In Q4, GM reported a loss of US$3 billion compared with profits of US$2.1 billion in the year-ago period. Revenues rose 11% to US$47.7 billion. The company projected 2025 earnings of between US$11 and US$12 per share, above analyst expectations.
Hourly workers of General Motors will be receiving a record-breaking profit-sharing check this year. The company announced Tuesday more than 40,000 eligible hourly workers, including those at the Kokomo General Motors Components Holdings plant,
Inventors punished the automaker's exclusion of uncertainty surrounding potential policy shifts on GM's financial performance.