General Motors Co on Wednesday posted a better-than-expected third-quarter profit as the US automaker's new line-up of pickup trucks and other revamped models boosted North American results, and revenue rose in Europe for the first time in two years.
The strong showing in North and South America and the improvement in Europe offset the decline in Asian markets outside China, including India and Southeast Asia. GM Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann said the No 1 US automaker's European unit remains on track to achieve its target of breaking even in the next year or so. GM has lost money in Europe for 13 straight years.
"The story in Europe overall is really consistent with the plan we laid out," he told reporters. "Our overall objective of getting to break-even by mid-decade, clearly we're well on track toward that." GM recently said it would shift the reporting of its profitable Russian market to the European unit from the international operations, but Ammann said that does not change the break-even timetable.
Excluding one-time items related to the repurchase of preferred stock and tax expenses, GM earned 96 cents a share, 2 cents more than analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S had expected. GM's shares rose about 2 percent to $36.94 in early New York Stock Exchange trading. Europe has been a key focus for investors since GM went public in November 2010 following its bankruptcy reorganisation and a $49.5 billion government bailout in 2009.
GM's European results continued a trend from the second quarter, when its loss in the region was almost one-third smaller than Wall Street analysts expected. GM has set a goal of hitting 10 percent profit margins in North America. In the third quarter, GM's margin in the region jumped to 9.3 percent, the highest in two years and up from 7.7 percent last year. The 9.3 percent margin "adds credibility" to GM's 10 percent target, Citi analyst Itay Michaeli said.
Ford's North American profit margin in the third quarter was 10.6 percent. GM also saw a $400 million benefit due to higher vehicle prices in North America in the third quarter. Amaturo predicted the automaker's pricing gains would accelerate next year with the introduction of GM's heavy-duty pickups and full-size SUVs. GM's third-quarter net income attributable to common shareholders fell to $757 million, or 45 cents a share, compared with $1.48 billion, or 89 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. But operating earnings rose almost 15 percent to $2.64 billion.
Revenue rose 3.7 percent from last year to $38.98 billion, but that was short of the $39.49 billion analysts had expected. GM's operating earnings in North America jumped 27 percent to a better-than-expected $2.19 billion. Analysts polled had expected $2.13 billion. Gabelli & Co analyst Brian Sponheimer credited strong sales of high-profit vehicles like the new Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck and Impala sedan.
The loss in Europe fell by more than half to $214 million from a loss of $487 million last year as GM squeezed out $400 million in costs and boosted revenue year over year for the first time since the third quarter of 2011. Analysts had expected a loss of $267.7 million. The company's South American profit jumped 79 percent in the quarter to $284 million, more than the $102.9 million analysts had expected. The results in North America and Europe helped to offset weaker-than-expected earnings in GM's international operations, which include China. While China's earnings were flat, markets outside China were a hindrance, Ammann said. GM's international earnings tumbled 61 percent to $299 million. Analysts polled by Reuters had expected a profit of $329.2 million.
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