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Car buyers think big in 1Q, boosting profit at GM

DETROIT (AP) — Encouraged by lower gas prices, consumers in the U.S. spent big in the first quarter on vehicles that carry lots of passengers and cargo — and deliver hefty profit margins for General Motors.

The shift to pickups and SUVs helped GM record $2.18 billion first-quarter profit in North America, its most lucrative market. Tougher conditions in Europe, particularly Russia, and South America whittled GM’s overall quarterly net profit down to $945 million.

Late last decade, big SUVs such as the Chevrolet Tahoe fell out of favor as consumers consistently saw prices above $3 at the gas pump and the U.S. economy struggled. But the economy is now growing, if somewhat unevenly, and gas has averaged about $2.30 per gallon so far this year. As a result, consumers bought nearly 55,000 big SUVs from GM, the best January-through-March total in seven years.

Pickup sales also rose as conditions improved for small businesses. GM sold more than 198,000 in the U.S., the best first quarter for the vehicles in eight years, according to Ward’s Automotive.

Those big vehicles bring in sizeable profits. For the quarter, the average price of a Tahoe rose 8 percent to more than $57,000, Kelley Blue Book said. Other truck-based SUVs saw similar or even larger increases. Analysts estimate that GM makes around $10,000 apiece on trucks such as the Chevrolet Silverado and Cadillac Escalade.

“With gas prices still near a seven-year low point, and with credit more affordable and available than ever, GM, like the rest of the industry, has seen a significant increase in sales of their most profitable vehicles,” said Kelley Blue Book Senior Analyst Alec Gutierrez.

Chief Financial Officer Chuck Stevens said consumers’ decision to buy big was “clearly a favorable tail wind” that boosted GM’s bottom line by $500 million.

Ford Motor Co., which makes the top-selling F-150 pickup as well as the Explorer SUV, reports earnings Tuesday. Fiat Chrysler, maker of the Ram pickup and Jeep SUV, reports Wednesday.

Still, GM’s latest pickup and SUV sales were nowhere near the peaks of the previous decade. Pickup sales were the best for a first quarter since 2007, when GM sold almost 243,000. Big truck-based SUV sales were the best since 2008, when they hit 107,000.

GM’s profit amounted to 56 cents per share, compared with only $125 million, or 6 cents per share a year ago. Last year’s quarter included a $1.3 billion charge for an embarrassing series of recalls — including one for a deadly ignition switch problem.

The company did take an after-tax charge of $100 million this year to add to its compensation fund for victims of crashes caused by the faulty switches. It also incurred a $400 million charge to cut operations in Russia. Without those items, GM would have made 86 cents per share, short of analysts’ estimates of 95 cents. Revenue for the quarter fell nearly 5 percent to $35.7 billion.

GM shares fell nearly 4 percent to $35.68 in midday trading Thursday. The stock is up about 4 percent so far this year.

The company has now set aside $550 million to pay victims of crashes caused by defective small-car ignition switches. So far compensation expert Kenneth Feinberg has deemed 87 deaths eligible for compensation, as well as 157 injuries. GM says the top end of its estimate for the fund remains at $600 million.

Also Thursday, CEO Mary Barra dismissed talk of merging with Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, an idea floated by Sergio Marchionne, Fiat Chrysler’s top executive.

Business Journal reporter to run for cancer as he battles it

WASHINGTON - It is a race in more ways than one for one of our own at WTOP. And you can help. Tucker Echols, the Washington Business Journal's reporter normally heard on WTOP every morning, is battling diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, a type of cancer that was discovered after he found a lump on his neck. "The very good news here is that it's very treatable," says Echols. "There is a chemotherapy regimen that has worked more than 10 years, almost 15 now, to give lots of folks like me, who catch it early, a good chance of survival." When the cancer is caught early, patients have an 80 percent chance of survival. But Echols, who is 51, has lost his hair to chemotherapy. And he has had a few difficult moments, like telling his two kids, who are 6 and 8. They asked him if he was going to die. "I said, 'No, I'm not going to die. That is the good news here.'" Now after consulting his oncologist, and despite the side effects that often accompany his treatment, Echols is preparing for the EagleMan Triathlon competition, a 70.3-mile race held in Cambridge, Md., June 9. "The key with chemotherapy is that you listen to your body and if you think you can do it, go ahead and do it," Echols says. Echols will run to raise money for three charities that are trying to cure cancer, and his goal is to raise $30,000. Click on the links below to donate: American Cancer Society; Leukemia & Lymphoma Society; Cure Starts Now Foundation. Follow @WTOP and @WTOPliving on Twitter.
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