3rdPartyFeeds

General Electric shares fall even after second-quarter revenue beats expectations

The industrial giant's bottom line took a bigger-than-expected hit as the company tries to weather the coronavirus pandemic. Read more...

Larry Culp, CEO, General Electric

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

General Electric on Wednesday reported a revenue figure for the second quarter that slightly beat analyst expectations. However, the industrial giant’s bottom line took a bigger-than-expected hit as the company tries to weather the coronavirus pandemic. 

Here’s how the company’s results compared with analyst expectations:

  • Revenue:  $17.7 billion vs $17.12 billion forecast
  • Loss per share: 15 cents per share vs a loss of 10 cents per share expected by a Refinitiv survey of analysts

GE’s stronger-than-forecast revenues were mainly driven by sales in the power and renewable energy divisions. Revenue from power came in at $4.16 billion and renewable energy raked in $3.51 billion, both topping FactSet estimates. Revenue from aviation disappointed, totaling $4.38 billion. 

The company also reported a loss of $2.1 billion in industrial free cash flow, which was better than the guidance issued by GE earlier this year.

“Our earnings performance was impacted by the ongoing impact of COVID-19 on our businesses, but Industrial free cash flow was better than our expectations and previously communicated range,” CEO Larry Culp said in a statement. “We made faster progress on elements within our control, including our targeted cost and cash preservation actions.”

GE shares were down 4% in midmorning trading. 

The company said it continued working toward cost reductions of more than $2 billion and its “near-term liquidity needs” were reduced by $10.5 billion in the second quarter. 

GE shares have taken a big hit this year, dropping more than 38% as the coronavirus pandemic shut down the economy and slowed air travel to a crawl. 

—CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report. 

Subscribe to CNBC PRO for exclusive insights and analysis, and live business day programming from around the world.

Read more

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment