GE Aerospace reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday. The 2025 outlook from the company looked solid too.Investors don’t have much to complain about. Shares rose.GE Aerospace reported fourth-quarter sales of $9.
GE Aerospace expects 2025 profit of $5.10 to $5.45 per share, compared with analysts' average estimate of $5.23, according to data compiled by LSEG. It reported an adjusted profit of $1.32 per share, beating analysts' average expectations of $1.04.
GE Aerospace posted a surge in quarterly revenue that blew past Wall Street’s estimates as the jet-engine maker received an influx of orders to end the year.
Shares of GE Aerospace were soaring toward levels not seen in nearly two decades after the maker of engines used by airlines and the military provided an upbeat earnings outlook for 2025 and said it was going to buy back more stock and boost its dividend by 30%.
GE Aerospace is slated to report fourth-quarter results before markets open Thursday, and analysts are bullish on the maker of airplane engines and other parts.
GE Aerospace (GE) is set to announce Q4 earnings, with analysts focused on engine deliveries, margins, and aftermarket growth outlook.
GE Aerospace (NYSE:GE) shares are trading higher premarket on Thursday after it reported fourth-quarter adjusted revenue growth of 16% year-over-year to $9.879 billion and GAAP revenue of $10.812 billion.
GE Aerospace reported Q4 results early Thursday as clear a buy point. Engines, services and defense revenues all climbed.
GE Aerospace is forecast to report nearly $35 billion in annual sales for 2024, clearing the way fo be the region’s next Fortune 500.
GE Aerospace was long considered one of the crown jewels inside of the General Electric conglomerate. Now independent, the company is demonstrating to investors what it is capable of. GE earned $1.32 per share in the fourth quarter on revenue of $10.8 billion, easily surpassing Wall Street's consensus $1.04 per share on $9.5 billion estimates.
GE's fourth-quarter results are likely to benefit from strength across its commercial and defense end markets. High costs and expenses are likely to have been spoilsports.