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General Motors Company (GM)

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50.96 +0.20 (+0.39%)
At close: November 1 at 4:00 PM EDT
50.94 -0.02 (-0.04%)
After hours: November 1 at 7:59 PM EDT
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DELL
  • Previous Close 50.76
  • Open 51.15
  • Bid 50.88 x 800
  • Ask 51.05 x 800
  • Day's Range 50.79 - 51.78
  • 52 Week Range 26.30 - 54.30
  • Volume 9,253,172
  • Avg. Volume 12,797,479
  • Market Cap (intraday) 56.036B
  • Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.43
  • PE Ratio (TTM) 5.44
  • EPS (TTM) 9.37
  • Earnings Date Jan 28, 2025
  • Forward Dividend & Yield 0.48 (0.94%)
  • Ex-Dividend Date Dec 6, 2024
  • 1y Target Est 59.08

General Motors Company designs, builds, and sells trucks, crossovers, cars, and automobile parts; and provide software-enabled services and subscriptions worldwide. The company operates through GM North America, GM International, Cruise, and GM Financial segments. It markets its vehicles primarily under the Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC, Baojun, and Wuling brand names. In addition, the company sells trucks, crossovers, cars, and automobile parts through retail dealers, and distributors and dealers, as well as to fleet customers, including daily rental car companies, commercial fleet customers, leasing companies, and governments. Further, it offers range of after-sale services through dealer network, such as maintenance, light repairs, collision repairs, vehicle accessories, and extended service warranties. Additionally, the company provides automotive financing; and software-enabled services and subscriptions. General Motors Company was founded in 1908 and is headquartered in Detroit, Michigan.

www.gm.com

163,000

Full Time Employees

December 31

Fiscal Year Ends

Recent News: GM

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Related Videos: GM

Performance Overview: GM

Trailing total returns as of 11/1/2024, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is

.

YTD Return

GM
43.02%
S&P 500
20.10%

1-Year Return

GM
82.70%
S&P 500
36.60%

3-Year Return

GM
4.17%
S&P 500
24.39%

5-Year Return

GM
43.60%
S&P 500
88.60%

Compare To: GM

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Statistics: GM

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Valuation Measures

Annual
As of 11/1/2024
  • Market Cap

    56.04B

  • Enterprise Value

    151.67B

  • Trailing P/E

    5.44

  • Forward P/E

    4.81

  • PEG Ratio (5yr expected)

    6.01

  • Price/Sales (ttm)

    0.33

  • Price/Book (mrq)

    0.79

  • Enterprise Value/Revenue

    0.83

  • Enterprise Value/EBITDA

    5.98

Financial Highlights

Profitability and Income Statement

  • Profit Margin

    6.06%

  • Return on Assets (ttm)

    2.70%

  • Return on Equity (ttm)

    14.17%

  • Revenue (ttm)

    182.72B

  • Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)

    10.99B

  • Diluted EPS (ttm)

    9.37

Balance Sheet and Cash Flow

  • Total Cash (mrq)

    27.32B

  • Total Debt/Equity (mrq)

    174.58%

  • Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)

    -2.34B

Research Analysis: GM

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Earnings Per Share

Consensus EPS
 

Revenue vs. Earnings

Revenue 48.76B
Earnings 3.06B
 

Analyst Recommendations

  • Strong Buy
  • Buy
  • Hold
  • Underperform
  • Sell
 

Analyst Price Targets

38.00 Low
59.08 Average
50.96 Current
88.00 High
 

Company Insights: GM

Research Reports: GM

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  • Daily – Vickers Top Buyers & Sellers for 10/25/2024

    The Vickers Top Buyers & Sellers is a daily report that identifies the five companies the largest insider purchase transactions based on the dollar value of the transactions as well as the five companies the largest insider sales transactions based on the dollar value of the transactions.

     
  • Raising target price to $60

    General Motors, one of the world's largest automakers, traces its roots back to 1908. GM and its strategic partners produce cars and trucks in 31 countries and sell and service these vehicles through the following brands: Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, FAW, GMC, Daewoo, Holden, Jiefang, Opel, Vauxhall, and Wuling. GM's largest national market is China, followed by the United States, Brazil, Germany, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Italy. The company emerged from bankruptcy in July 2009 and went public through a new share offering in November 2010.

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  • Sector Breadth a Positive Heading into Year-End The S&P 500 closed on October

    Sector Breadth a Positive Heading into Year-End The S&P 500 closed on October 18, logging its sixth consecutive winning week. During that mid-October week, the three major averages - the S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and the Nasdaq Composite - all set new all-time highs. That's a rare example of the blue-chip index, the broad market, and growth stocks all moving in concert. One reason the major indices are moving broadly in lockstep follows from analysis of S&P sector performance. The growth leadership that characterized most of 2023 and the 2024 first half gave way to non-traditional leaders in 3Q24; these included rate-sensitive, cyclical, and defensive sectors. All but one sector was positive in 3Q24, but the various sectors had highly varied performances. The tag-team approach to sector leadership across the nine months has contributed to well-balanced year-to-date performance. All sectors are positive for 2024, and all but one sector was up in double-digit percentages for the year to date as of 9/30/24. Sector Performance for 1H24 In the first quarter of 2024, investors saw signs that leadership in the market might be shifting. During the quarter, the S&P 500 delivered capital appreciation of 10.2%. Five sectors either outperformed the broad market or finished within a percentage point of the S&P 500. Two were the traditional growth leaders: Communication Services finished up 11.9%, and the Information Technology sector appreciated 10.0%. The best two sectors, however, were not the traditional leaders. Energy and Financial both finished on March 31 with 12.0% gains. Another sector, Industrial, was a tick behind Financial, with a 9.9% gain. Healthcare and Materials both had solid third quarters, with gains of about 8% and 7%, respectively. In a sign of things to come, Utilities - out of favor particularly during the Fed's rate-hiking campaign of 2022-2023 - logged a roughly 6% first-quarter gain. Stock sectors with above-market income tend to outperform the broad market in periods of declining interest rates. Although the Fed stood pat during 1Q24, the market was already buzzing about the potential for rate cuts later in the year. The only negative sector in the quarter was Real Estate, down 3%. While Utility stocks tend to move in lockstep, Real Estate equities in different niches are subject to different cyclical and secular forces, such as the pandemic-driven collapse in commercial office occupancy. In the second quarter of 2024, the broad market advance was much more subdued, with the S&P 500 rising less than 4% after its 10%-plus surge in 1Q24. Growth leadership reasserted itself in the second quarter. With buzzwords like 'Mag 7' and 'Gen AI' resonating in the background, Information Technology led the market with an 11.4% gain. Communication Services also topped the broad market with a 4.9% gain. While growth was back, the shift toward beneficiaries of declining interest rates further accelerated as the likelihood of the first Fed rate cut drew nearer. The Utility sector appreciated 4% in 2024. Possibly because of those secular factors cited above, Real Estate continued to struggle and declined about 2% in the quarter. Multiple other sectors were negative in 2Q24, including Industrial and Materials (both down about 5%), Energy (down 3%), and Financial and Healthcare (both down about 1%). For the full first half of 2024, growth sectors won; but participation widened across the broad market, and only one sector (Real Estate) was down. In the first half of 2024, the S&P 500 appreciated 14.5%. Just two sectors did better than the market in the first half: Information Technology, up 22.6%; and Communication Services, up 17.4%. The two other double-digit winners in the first half were Financial, up 11%; and Utilities, up about 10%. The paired leadership of the third- and fourth-place sectors may seem counter-intuitive. If rates are about to come down, wouldn't that hurt net interest margins at banks? While that is true, banks have many other fee-based businesses, including investment banking, capital markets financing, and consumer loans, that benefit in a declining rate environment. Besides the negative showing from Real Estate, five other sectors posted single-digit gains in 1H24: Energy (up 9%), Healthcare (up 7%), Consumer Staples (up 6%), Industrials (up 4%), and Materials (up 1%). Those latter two sectors are at least partly sensitive to demand from China, which as of mid-year remained mired in its slump. Sector Performance for 3Q24 Investors at mid-year 2024, assessing the clear growth leadership at the sector level, may have thought that 2024 would shape up as a replay of 2023: a narrowly led market defined by AI fever. Instead, non-traditional sectors grabbed the leadership reins in 3Q24. Why did the market pivot away from growth and toward defensive, rate-sensitive, and cyclical in 3Q24? Seasoned investors always want to take money off the table before some kind of sentiment shift turns paper profits into a wisp of smoke. That explains the rotation away from growth. As for the rotation toward other sectors, signs that China was becoming serious about stimulating its economy stirred interest in the commodities complex, as did the worsening situation in the Middle East. And midway through September, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates for the first time in over four years. In the third quarter of 2024, the broad market advanced 7.4%, splitting the difference between first- and second-quarter gains. With the first Fed rate cuts no longer imminent but now a reality, momentum shifted clearly to income sectors. Real Estate made up for its late start and led the S&P 500 in 3Q24 with a 17.2% gain. Just behind was Utilities with a 16.1% gain. The growth leaders of 2023 participated in the 3Q advance, but Information Technology was at the back of the pack. The sector advanced less than 1% in 3Q24. Communication Services rose a rounded 6%, which was close to mid-pack. The other growth sector from 2023, Consumer Discretionary, surged 10% in 3Q24 after being up just 2% at mid-year. Plainly, sentiment toward the sector has improved on the belief that lower rates will help sales of homes and vehicles going forward. Financial was next in line, rallying 9% on hopes for continued progress in fee-based revenues. Two traditional defensive sectors, Consumer Staples and Healthcare, logged 3Q gains of 8% and 6%, respectively. Materials rose 7%, with much of the gain back-weighted to September following news of China's stimulus plan. The lone negative sector in 3Q24 was Energy, which dropped 4%. Energy stocks rallied in the first half partly on expectations that the worsening situation in the Middle East, along with hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, would push up oil prices. But benchmark NYMEX crude finished 3Q24 at $67 per barrel, down from $81 at mid-year. Sector Performance for 2024 Year to Date As of 9/30/24, the S&P 500 was up 20.8% on a capital-appreciation basis and up 22.1% on a total-return basis (assuming reinvestment of dividends). All but two sectors were up in double-digit percentages; the single-digit sectors, Energy and Materials, have been impacted by China and the other geo-political factors cited above. Energy was up 5.0% for the year as of the end of 3Q24, while Materials was up 8.7%. Three sectors were ahead of the market at the three-quarters mark: Utilities, up 27.6%; Communication Services, up 23.9%; and Information Technology, up 23.5%. The Financial sector, up 20.7% at the nine-month mark, was within a whisker of the S&P 500 advance. The remaining five sectors, in descending order of performance, were: Industrials, up 16.9% for the first nine months of 2024; Consumer Staples, up 15.2%; Healthcare, up 13.5%; Consumer Discretionary, up 12.1%; and Real Estate, up 11.4%. Conclusion Since 1980, capital appreciation on the S&P 500 has been about 10%. A key takeaway from his exercise is that as of 9/30/24, the ninth-best sector in the S&P 500, Real Estate, already has outperformed the full-year average gain for the S&P 500. When we look back at recent winning years for the S&P 500, this degree of breadth is uncommon. In 2023, for example, the three growth sectors (Information Technology, Communication Services, and Consumer Discretionary) far outpaced the market; and the average annual gain for the remaining eight sectors was 3.4%. The winning year of 2021 showed better balance, with all but one sector up in double-digits. Still, only three sectors bested the 26.9% advance for the S&P 500 in 2021. And in 2020, only two sectors did better than the S&P 500's 16.3% gain. October 2024 has so far continued the positive trend in stocks. We have noted that stock markets that are strongly ahead at the nine-month mark tend to pad their gains in the final three months, this as bears capitulate and wealth managers window-dress their portfolios with the year's best stocks. This market, in our view, has more than breadth and momentum on its side. While the election looms large in the final weeks before voting day, the key long-term factor for the market remains the Fed's just-begun rate-cutting cycle. Based on the Fed's own indications along with market expectations, the central bank will be cutting rates for the next two years. That has the potential to be a market tailwind not just into year-end 2024 but potentially well into 2025.

     
  • GM Earnings: The Market's Pricing Decline Fears Continue to Be Unrealized

    General Motors Co. emerged from the bankruptcy of General Motors Corp. (old GM) in July 2009. GM has eight brands and operates under four segments: GM North America, GM International, Cruise, and GM Financial. The United States now has four brands instead of eight under old GM. The company regained its US market share leader crown in 2022, after losing it to Toyota due to the chip shortage in 2021. 2023's share was 16.5%. GM's Cruise autonomous vehicle arm has previously done driverless geofenced AV robotaxi services in San Francisco and other cities but stopped in late 2023 after an accident. It restarted service in 2024 but not in California. GM owns over 80% of Cruise. GM Financial became the company's captive finance arm in October 2010 via the purchase of AmeriCredit.

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