GM Clings To Its First In Class Status

General Motors is riding easy — for now. After years of struggling to transform into an electrified rival to Tesla, the Detroit-based automaker is defying expectations, pumping up prices and edging ahead of its old-guard peers. The problem is, while the company led by Mary Barra is well-suited to this moment, the moment might be ending.

Third-quarter results unveiled Tuesday show revenue, at nearly $49 billion, beating analysts’ expectations by 8%, while operating profit came in 22% higher, according to Visible Alpha. GM’s shares leaped over 9% and are trouncing competitors’ year-to-date.

Barra’s lieutenants have, in the past, signaled that new-vehicle prices might not hold. It seems reasonable: GM juiced billions in profit from pricing since the pandemic crushed supply back in 2020. Interest-rate hikes make car loans more expensive. Industry-wide, prices have declined for 11 months, Cox Automotive reckons.

GM’s results, however, defy the trend. While arch-rival Ford Motor remains 17% below its 2018 sales volume, GM clawed back to a 5% deficit. Its electric effort – stumbling for years as battery plants scaled up – is gaining traction. Barra expects to produce 200,000 EVs this year, which should finally cover their per-unit costs. The company’s share of the U.S. EV market rose to 9.3%, according to Cox, nearly double its mid-2023 slice.

Even autonomous taxi unit Cruise has promise. In the penalty box since a pedestrian collision last year, it nearly halved its losses to $400 million this quarter. But it’s rolled out new testing markets; Barra says unsupervised rides will resume by year-end. As Alphabet’s Waymo proves robotaxis’ viability, topping 100,000 weekly rides, that’s a tantalizing prospect. GM plans to work with Uber Technologies and is looking for a new source of funding. A solid strategic partner could help snag more customers.

Yet uncertainty keeps rising. Republican Donald Trump could win the White House, and is skeptical of EV subsidies that are providing an $800 million benefit to GM this year. Tesla boss Elon Musk is pushing low-cost robotaxi technology that, while a long-shot, could upend the industry.

Even GM remains cautious: despite predicting an up to $4 billion profitability boost from improving EV economics, it expects 2025’s results to match this year’s, implying declines elsewhere. At a mere 5 times expected earnings, its valuation pales to Tesla’s 89 times and indicates market skepticism of any upside. Barra might seem first-in-class among the aged automakers looking to catch Musk. Holding on to that lead could get a lot tougher.


More By This Author:

S&P 500 Earnings Dashboard 24Q3 - Tuesday, Oct. 22
S&P 500 Earnings Dashboard 24Q3 - Friday, Oct. 18
Russell 2000 Earnings Dashboard 24Q3 - Thursday, Oct. 17

Disclaimer: This article is for information purposes only and does not constitute any investment advice.

The views expressed are the views of the author, not necessarily those of Refinitiv ...

more
How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Or Sign in with