Q2 Earnings Snapshot
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At the start of Q2 earnings season, investors looked for tariff-related impacts on profits. Major U.S. financial firms reported only limited effects—especially compared to the auto industry. General Motors (No.
General Motors said July 22 that tariffs could eventually cost the company $5 billion before the end of the year.
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GlobalData on MSNGeneral Motors profit takes a tariffs tumble
General Motors has reported a sharp drop in profits as it took a $1.1bn hit in Q2 due to the impact of trade tariffs. It said the net impact reflected ‘minimal mitigation offsets’. Net income was down by over a third on last year at $1.
General Motors valuation remains attractive at 5.0X P/E forward earnings, with solid EV momentum and upside if tariffs ease. Learn more on GM stock here.
GM stock value fell sharply on Tuesday following the release of the automaker's Q2 2025 earnings report, revealing a hefty 35.4-percent decline in net income.
Despite a decrease in overall sales for the year, EVs are shining bright in the lead-up to September’s consumer credit deadline.
General Motors has revealed that tariffs imposed by Donald Trump’s administration sliced an eye-watering $1.1 billion from its second-quarter profits, causing a 3% dip in its stock price. That throbbing hit knocked GM’s operating earnings down by nearly a third compared to the same time last year, the published numbers revealed.
General Motors says it lost more than $1 billion in the second quarter because of U.S. tariffs. Stellantis lost more than double that in the first half of the year and blamed a sizeable chunk of that on tariffs, as well.
General Motors' Q2 2025 profit dropped 35% due to $1.1 billion in tariff costs, prompting a $4 billion U.S. manufacturing push to offset
General Motors has beaten analyst estimates for both earnings per share and revenue in more than 10 straight quarters. Will the streak continue?
General Motors (NYSE:GM) reported adjusted EPS of $2.53, topping analysts' $2.45 estimate, but revenue declined 1.8% year?on?year to $47.12 billion. The sales drop in key North American and China markets raised questions about demand resilience.