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Start your engines! General Motors (NYSE: GM) will report its first-quarter 2018 earnings results on Thursday, April 26. What should we expect?
What Wall Street expects
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect GM to report first-quarter earnings of $1.28 per share, on average, down from $1.75 in the first quarter of 2017. They expect GM's revenue to come in at $34.6 billion, down from $41.2 billion a year ago.
That's a huge drop in revenue! What happened?
Part of what happened is that GM sold its European subsidiary, Opel AG, in a transaction that closed early in the third quarter of 2017. On a "continuing operations" basis, excluding Opel's results, GM generated $37.3 billion in revenue in the first quarter of 2017.
Analysts are still expecting a year-over-year revenue decline, but it's a $2.7 billion decline, not a $6.6 billion drop.
GM's all-new line of crossover SUVs are still racking up big sales. U.S. sales of the Chevrolet Equinox rose 31% in the first quarter. Image source: General Motors.
Is this about falling sales?
Good question, but probably not. GM's sales didn't decline in the first quarter, at least not in its two largest markets. The General's U.S. sales rose 3.8% in the first quarter, on good results for its profitable crossovers and big SUVs. Its sales in China were up 7.9% from a year ago, paced by a 40% year-over-year increase in high-profit Cadillac sales.
Sounds good, right? Yes and no. When we dig deeper, we see some reasons to think that GM's margin (and revenue) might get squeezed this time around. For starters, GM's incentives in the U.S. are at a high level: 13.3% of its average transaction price (ATP) in the first quarter. And lower-margin fleet sales made up a somewhat higher percentage of GM's overall U.S. sales than they did a year ago: While overall sales were up 3.8%, GM's U.S. retail sales rose just 0.8%.
That said, GM points out that its U.S. ATP, which is net of incentives, was up $900 from the first quarter of 2017.
What about China? We don't have as much visibility into GM's pricing in China as we do here in the United States. But we note that aside from Cadillac, which represented just 5.6% of GM's overall sales in China in the first quarter, many of the strongest results were for inexpensive models: A discount compact car called the Chevrolet Cavalier, and several entries from the low-priced Baojun brand, were among GM's biggest sellers in the first quarter. A year ago, GM was moving more Buick crossovers: Sales are strong, but despite the big sales increase for Cadillac, the overall mix of products suggests a drop from the 9.3% margin GM realized in China in the first quarter of 2017.