GM Reports First Profits in 3 Years
By wchung | 29 Apr, 2026
General Motors Co. rode expense cuts from its bankruptcy and strong sales of redesigned models to its first quarterly net income in nearly three years.
The $865 million first-quarter profit is a dramatic reversal from the huge $6 billion loss in the same period last year. The last time the company made a quarterly profit was the second quarter of 2007, when it earned $891 million.
The Detroit automaker said it made money because debt and other expenses were slashed by its stay in bankruptcy court, and because of strong new-model sales. It also generated higher revenue from fast growth in Asia and South America.
The earnings of $1.66 per share from January through March are stunningly different from the first quarter of last year, when the largest U.S. automaker lost $9.78 per share as it skidded toward bankruptcy protection.
First-quarter revenue soared 40 percent to $31.5 billion.
New models such as the Chevrolet Equinox small sport utility vehicle and the Buick LaCrosse luxury sedan lifted GM’s North American operations to a $1.2 billion profit, compared with a $3.4 billion loss in the year-earlier quarter. North America had been a continual drain on GM’s profits before its bankruptcy filing last year.
CEO Ed Whitacre has predicted a full-year profit as U.S. auto sales continue their slow recovery. That could lead to a public stock offering late in the year and full repayment of the $50 billion in U.S. government aid that stopped GM from going under last year.
The U.S. government now owns 61 percent of the company.
DEE-ANN DURBIN, TOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writers DETROIT
Recent Articles
- Musk Portrays Altman As Schemer Who Misled Him
- S. Korea Exports Seen Rising Sharply Again in April on Chip Boom
- House Democrats Urge Trump to Keep Ban on Chinese Cars
- China Tech Firms Scramble for Huawei AI Chips after DeepSeek V4 Launch
- US Orders Halt on Chip Equipment Shipments to China's No. 2 Chipmaker
- Spot Crude Premiums Ease Despite Hormuz Closure
- Trump Approval Sinks to New Low on Living-Cost Jump from Iran Adventure
- LG Electronics, Nvidia Mull Pact on Robots, AI data Centrer and Mobility
- Starbucks Shares Rise on Signs of Turnaround
- Robinhood Shares Fall as Crypto Slump Dents Trading Volume Growth
