Better Buy: Toyota Motor Corporation vs. General Motors

General Motors'(NYSE: GM) stock has a lot going for it: GM is selling huge numbers of high-profit trucks and SUVs today, and it has emerged as a leader in the key technologies (self-driving, electric cars) that will drive profits for automakers.

But how does it compare with Toyota Motor Corporation (NYSE: TM) as an investment? Toyota is an innovation powerhouse as an early leader in green auto technologies that is renowned for its low-cost manufacturing and consistently high quality.

For investors looking to put new money to work today, which one is the better buy?

A red 2017 Toyota Prius hybrid sedan.
A red 2017 Toyota Prius hybrid sedan.

Toyota is the world's leading maker of gasoline-electric hybrid cars. But it has been slow to embrace fully electric vehicles. Image source: Toyota Motor Corporation.

By the numbers: Toyota versus GM

Here's how the two auto giants compared on some key measures over the last four quarters.

Metric

Toyota

General Motors

Vehicles sold

10.3 million

9.8 million

Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT)

$17.95 billion

$12.0 billion

EBIT margin

6.9%

7.7%

Earnings per share

$11.39

$5.81

Price-to-earnings ratio

11.2

7.2

Dividend yield

3.15%

3.72%

Data sources: Toyota, General Motors, Thomson Reuters. Sales totals are for the last four quarters combined and include sales by unconsolidated joint ventures in China. Financial figures are for the period beginning on Oct. 1, 2016 and ending on Sept. 30, 2017. EBIT excludes the impact of one-time items. Results for General Motors exclude costs and charges related to the sale of Opel AG.

Toyota sells more vehicles than GM, and generates more revenue and profit. Both pay solid dividends that should be sustainable through a moderate recession. Both also have strong, stable management teams that have the companies moving generally in the right directions. Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda and GM CEO Mary Barra are both strong leaders who have made good moves to cut costs and position their companies for the future.

In other words, GM and Toyota are both healthy, well-managed global auto giants. But GM's profit margin is somewhat fatter than Toyota's, and its valuation is somewhat lower. That seems worth a closer look.

Toyota and GM: Potential for profit growth

Both Toyota and GM are global giants, rivaled in scale only by Volkswagen AG (NASDAQOTH: VLKAY) and the "alliance" of Nissan and Renault. Toyota dominates its home market of Japan, has a major presence in North America, a growing presence in China, and a small presence in Europe. GM dominates its home market of North America, is one of the two biggest-selling automakers (with VW) in China, and has little to no presence in Japan and Europe.