General Motors' new guidance includes a $4 billion to $5 billion headwind from President Donald Trump's automotive tariffs.
GM lowers 2025 guidance, citing up to $5 billion in tariff exposure
General Motors Co. took an ax to its full-year guidance on Thursday, as the automaker said it now expects the current tariffs to cost up to $5 billion.
LMT offers a stronger return on equity and better valuation metrics, while GD, despite strong recent earnings, faces greater solvency concerns.
General Motors (GM -4.19%) just sounded a warning for the entire stock market.
American International's first-quarter earnings are likely to have witnessed a higher combined ratio in General Insurance.
Dollar General has greatly outperformed the S&P 500 during President Donald Trump's first 100 days back in office. Analysts say a market rotation to defensive stocks and Dollar General's lower exposure to China tariffs have boosted the stock.
Stellantis NV (NYSE:STLA, EPA:STLA) said on Wednesday it was withdrawing its 2025 outlook due to uncertainty over new US trade tariffs introduced by President Donald Trump. The Fiat and Jeep carmaker had previously expected modest growth in profit and cash flow this year but now says it is too difficult to judge the impact of evolving tariffs on demand and competition.
The move comes as the Detroit legacy automaker's stock fell by nearly 2% on Tuesday after the company pulled its earnings guidance for 2025.
Although the revenue and EPS for General Motors (GM) give a sense of how its business performed in the quarter ended March 2025, it might be worth considering how some key metrics compare with Wall Street estimates and the year-ago numbers.
General Motors Company (NYSE:GM) shares fell 2% after the automaker pulled its 2025 full-year guidance, which it noted did not consider the impact of tariffs. The company has postponed its first quarter earnings call until Thursday, when CEO Mary Barra and CFO Paul Jacobson will provide updated guidance that reflects the impact of updates to trade policy.
Pre-market futures are mixed-to-flat once again, this time with the blue-chip Dow leading into positive territory.