Times of Oman

GE’s quarterly earnings beat expectatio­ns

GE affirmed its forecast for 2018 earnings and cash flow, and said it expects to book as much as $10 billion in proceeds from divesting industrial assets this year. Those comments eased concern that GE would post poor results.

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NEW YORK: General Electric Co posted quarterly results that topped expectatio­ns on Friday, as earnings from aviation, healthcare and transporta­tion offset weak power and oil-and-gas profits, sending shares sharply higher.

GE affirmed its forecast for 2018 earnings and cash flow, and said it expects to book as much as $10 billion in proceeds from divesting industrial assets this year. Those comments eased concern that GE would post poor results.

GE’s profit reflected 7-per cent revenue growth and vigorous cost cutting. Revenue rose in aviation, oil-and-gas and healthcare, offsetting declines in power, transporta­tion, lighting and renewable energy. GE sliced $1 billion in costs, including $800 million in industrial structural costs.

GE’s shares were up 3.8 per cent to $14.52 on Thursday. The stock has lost more than half its value in the past last year.

But GE also took a $1.5-billion reserve charge for potential costs associated with its discontinu­ed WMC mortgage business, formerly part GE Capital.

The US Department of Justice has been investigat­ing the activities of GE’s former mortgage unit during the subprime mortgage crisis, since 2015. GE said settlement discussion­s with the DOJ in March and analysis of other banks’ reserves prompted it to take the charge, but it sees limited impact to results.

“We do not expect this to change our view on GE Capital with regards to cash and liquidity,” GE Chief Financial Officer Jamie Miller said on a conference call with analysts.

Excluding adjustment­s, GE earned $369 million, or 4 cents a share, on revenue of $28.7 billion. That compared with 1 cent a share a year ago.

“I’m looking at it as coming in as expected,” analyst Jeff Windau at Edward Jones, said of the results and the adjustment­s. “And expectatio­ns were low.”

JPMorgan analyst Steve Tusa was among those who said GE may cut its full-year earnings forecast in coming months. While results were “not that bad” compared with other quarters, Tusa said, negative free cash flow of $1.68 billion was weaker than he expected. GE typically reports negative cash flow early in the year as it spends on inventory shipped later in the year.

GE earned an adjusted 16 cents per share, up from a restated 14 cents a share a year earlier. Analysts on average had expected 11 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. GE recently restated 2017 results to reflect changes in accounting standards.

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