The Columbus Dispatch

GM is back in black

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT — General Motors posted an $8.1 billion net profit for 2018, fueled by better prices for vehicles sold in the U.S., its most lucrative market.

It’s a strong rebound from the previous year, when the company lost $3.9 billion on a giant tax accounting charge.

GM made $10.8 billion before taxes in North America, down about 9 percent from 2017. But it still means big profit-sharing checks for about 46,500 union workers in the U.S. They’ll get $10,750 each, less than last year’s $11,500.

The company said Wednesday that it made $5.58 per share for the year. Without $2.5 billion worth of special items largely due to restructur­ing, the profit was $6.54, easily beating Wall Street expectatio­ns of $6.29, according to a survey by Factset.

Full-year revenue rose 1 percent to $147.05 billion, also beating estimates of just over $145 billion.

GM made $2 billion, or $1.40 per share in the fourth quarter. Excluding restructur­ing charges, the company’s per-share earnings were $1.43, also breezing past Wall Street expectatio­ns of $1.24.

Shares of GM rose 1.4 percent.

Chief Financial Officer Dhivya Suryadevar­a said GM made $2 billion on its joint venture in China last quarter, despite slowing auto sales in the country.

The Trump administra­tion’s tariffs on imported aluminum and steel raised prices of those commoditie­s, costing the company more than $1 billion last year. Suryadevar­a expects another $1 billion increase this year.

“It’s a volatile environmen­t as you well know, and we’re going to have to see how that goes,” she said.

GM has managed to offset some costs with efficienci­es, she told reporters Wednesday.

For the full year, GM made $423 million pretax from its internatio­nal operations, about one third of the $1.3 billion from a year earlier. GM Financial, the company’s lending arm, earned $1.9 billion, almost 60 percent more than in 2017. Cruise Automation, GM’S autonomous vehicle unit, lost $728 million, 19 percent more than a year earlier. The company expects to spend $1 billion on Cruise this year, and CEO Mary Barra predicted a profit on autonomous vehicles early in the next decade.

GM thinks that it will outpace last year’s performanc­e in 2019. Suryadevar­a said she expects an adjusted profit of $6.50 to $7 per share.

Even with the profit, GM’S U.S. sales last year fell 1.6 percent as big SUVS and the company’s top-selling Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck faltered during the fourth quarter. But sales of many smaller SUVS rose, and the average sale price of a GM vehicle hit a record of $36,974, the company said. GM’S U.S. market share fell 0.4 percentage points to 16.7 percent.

The profits were announced as GM lays off about 4,300 white-collar workers, many of them at its giant technical center in Warren, Michigan. The company also plans to eliminate about 6,000 factory-worker jobs by closing three car assembly plants and two other factories. But it says there are 2,700 openings for U.S. workers at factories across the nation.

 ?? [PAUL SANCYA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? GM’S sales in the U.S. fell 1.6 percent last year, but the average sale price of the company’s vehicles hit a record $36,974.
[PAUL SANCYA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] GM’S sales in the U.S. fell 1.6 percent last year, but the average sale price of the company’s vehicles hit a record $36,974.

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