General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE) today reported first quarter results that matched Wall Street expectations. Investors pushed up the shares in pre-market trading.
Net income was $4.5 billion, or 44 cents per share, compared with $4.4 billion, or 42 cents, a year earlier. Revenue jumped 4 percent to $38.6 billion. Analysts expected profit of 44 cents on revenue of $39.8 billion, according to Thomson Financial.
GE's Infrastructure, Commercial Finance and Money units each posted double-digit revenue gains while GE Healthcare was little changed and NBC Universal and Industrial declined. All of the divisions showed gains in operating profit except Industrial.
Other highlights include a 32% gain in major equipment backlog, an 11% gain in services order and a 22% increase in financial services assets. Cash flow from operations rose 10 percent to $7.4 billion. The company was hurt by the meltdown in subprime mortgages at its WFC Mortgage business.
As expected, GE Infrastructure did well. Its revenue rose 18 percent to $11.9 billion, while operating jumped 28 percent to $2.2 billion. Revenue at Commercial Finance jumped 15% to $6.28 billion and 14 percent to $5.28 billion in GE Money. Commercial Finance profit rose 21 percent to $1.42 billion and GE Money profit gained 2 percent to $851 million.
Industrial revenue fell 9 percent to $7.4 billion and profit slumped 20 percent to $480 million. NBC Universal continued to lag with revenue plunging $3.48 billion as operating profit rose 6 percent to $691 million.
Investors, though, will reserve judgment on GE until this morning's earnings conference call.










