General Motors Is Accelerating as Pickups Drive Profit Surge

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General Motors Rallies on Strong Demand, Margins, Electric Plans

Electric cars have been a major story this year, but legacy automaker General Motors is also on the move.

GM has taken off since the end of the summer as a combination of bullish forces drive its stock to the highest level in over two years. It marks a victory for CEO Mary Barra as she reengineers one of the most famous American firms.

Her first accomplishment has been major cost reductions. Last quarter, GM’s sales inched up just 0.8 percent to $32 billion. That barely matched analyst forecasts. Gross profit, on the other hand, spiked 35 percent. The result was a huge per-share earnings beat, almost 100 percent above Wall Street consensus.

Next, GM has focused on the giant Chinese market. Its sales in the Asian country outpaced the U.S. by growing 12 percent last quarter. Buick and Cadillac were the leading brands. The company’s also gaining traction in a key growth market: electric vehicles.

Three-month percentage change chart comparing General Motors (GM) and Tesla (TSLA). Notice GM's recent outperformance.
Three-month percentage change chart comparing General Motors (GM) and Tesla (TSLA). Notice GM’s recent outperformance.

That’s Barra’s third big focus. A key step has been the development of GM’s Ultium Drive, a system of batteries and electric motors for use across its vehicle fleet. Some analysts see that transformation lifting its valuation. For example, Tesla (TSLA) trades at about 14 times revenue, while GM only commands 0.5x. If they’re right, it could translate into a much higher share price.

Pickups and SUVs

Even with the embrace of electric vehicles, GM is still a traditional automaker. At that’s where Barra’s biggest win is taking place: pickups and SUVs. Domestic sales rose each month between July and September, led by crossovers, full-size pickups and large SUVs. There was especially strong demand for new models like the Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban, plus the GMC Yukon.

Those traditional products generally have wider profit margins, which also helped boost GM’s bottom line.

Finally a lot of attention this week has focused on electric vehicles. Nio (NIO) reported earnings last night and S&P Dow Jones Indices added Tesla (TSLA) to the S&P 500. But GM is keeping pace as Barra steers the company toward its next 110 years of business.

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David Russell is VP of Market Intelligence at TradeStation Group. Drawing on two decades of experience as a financial journalist and analyst, his background includes equities, emerging markets, fixed-income and derivatives. He previously worked at Bloomberg News, CNBC and E*TRADE Financial. Russell systematically reviews countless global financial headlines and indicators in search of broad tradable trends that present opportunities repeatedly over time. Customers can expect him to keep them apprised of sector leadership, relative strength and the big stories – especially those overlooked by other commentators. He’s also a big fan of generating leverage with options to limit capital at risk.