General Motors lit up the market on Tuesday, blowing past Wall Street’s expectations for the third quarter and jacking up its full-year forecast for 2025.
Traders didn’t blink — they bought. The stock jumped more than 15%, ripping toward its best day since 2020. It had closed at $58 on Monday. By noon Tuesday, the rally was in full gear.
The automaker reported $2.80 in adjusted earnings per share, beating the $2.31 estimate.Revenue hit $48.59 billion, ahead of the expected $45.27 billion, and only slightly below the $48.76 billion it pulled in during the same period last year.
Adjusted EBIT came in at $3.38 billion, way ahead of the $2.72 billion forecast. GM doesn’t count one-time items or non-core stuff in these numbers — they keep it clean.
With Q3 in the bag, General Motors raised the bar for the rest of the year. The company now expects adjusted EBIT between $12 billion and $13 billion, compared to the previous $10 billion to $12.5 billion. Adjusted EPS for the year moves up to $9.75 to $10.50, from $8.25 to $10. Automotive free cash flow is also getting an upgrade — $10 billion to $11 billion, up from $7.5 billion to $10 billion.
That fourth-quarter outlook is looking spicy too. GM projects adjusted EPS between $1.64 and $2.39, with the midpoint at $2.02. That’s higher than analysts’ average target of $1.94. CEO Mary Barra told shareholders Tuesday, “Thanks to the collective efforts of our team, and our compelling vehicle portfolio, GM delivered another very good quarter of earnings and free cash flow. Based on our performance, we are raising our full-year guidance.”
General Motors also trimmed its projected tariff hit for 2025. It now expects $3.5 billion to $4.5 billion in tariff impact, down from $4 billion to $5 billion. Barra gave credit to President Donald Trump for “the important tariff updates” announced last Friday. The new policy adds tariffs on imported medium- and heavy-duty trucks and parts, while extending a 3.75% offset for American-made vehicles.
But it wasn’t all green arrows. The company took a $1.6 billion hit last week from scaling back its electric vehicle push. That charge wasn’t included in the adjusted numbers, but it still dragged net income for stockholders down to $1.3 billion, a 57% drop from last year’s $3.1 billion. Net income margin cratered to 2.7%, down from 6.3%.
On EVs, GM CFO Paul Jacobson told CNBC that only 40% of the company’s electric vehicles are profitable on a production level. That’s way lower than investors hoped. He warned that turning a profit on EVs will take longer, as adoption cools. “We do have some structural changes that we need to do to make sure that we lower the cost of producing those vehicles,” Jacobson said on “Squawk Box.”
Still, General Motors gained ground in the EV market. According to Motor Intelligence, the company’s EV share jumped from 8.7% at the start of the year to 13.8% by the end of Q3. That pushed it ahead of Hyundai and Kia, which sit at 8.6%, but it’s still trailing Tesla by a mile.
The North American business, which has been GM’s cash cow, made $2.5 billion in Q3, adjusted. That’s a drop from last year’s numbers, and the profit margin fell to 6.2%, down from 9.7%. Barra said Tuesday that her “top priority” is getting margins in North America back to 8% to 10%. That’ll take discipline in EV costs, production, pricing, and tariff exposure.
What helped cover that margin slip? China. GM’s Chinese unit added $217 million more in profit than last year. Its international segment chipped in another $184 million in gains. GM Financial, the company’s lending arm, also pulled its weight — $804 million in adjusted earnings, up 17% from last year.
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