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BUSINESS NEWS

April 17, 2015 by

Web Page sponsored by Odyssey Corporate Finance

Contact: Tom McCarthy, Director, Odyssey Corporate Finance
M: 07867 459 600
D: 0121 503 2375
E:
www.odysseycf.com
———————————————————————
17 Apr 15. General Electric Co’s (GE.N) quarterly industrial earnings rose 9 percent, helped by cost cuts that expanded profit margins, as the U.S. conglomerate banks on manufacturing of jet engines, turbines and other big-ticket products as it unloads most of its finance business.
Revenue fell 1 percent in its industrial segments, hurt by a $950m hit from the stronger dollar, GE said on Friday. Stripping out the currency drag and the impact from deals, sales rose 3 percent. The stronger dollar is expected to weigh on U.S. industrial companies, whose revenues are hurt when foreign sales are translated back into the U.S. currency. Overall, GE posted a first-quarter net loss of $13.6bn, or $1.35 per share. Results were weighed down by about $16bn in charges tied to its exit of GE Capital assets. The company disclosed last week it was shedding much of its finance business. Excluding special items, GE posted earnings of 31 cents per share, topping by 1 cent the average analyst estimate, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Shares slipped 0.7 percent to $27.09 in premarket trading.
Sales in GE’s oil and gas business, which has been in focus due to the slide in oil prices, dropped 8 percent, with profit down 3 percent. Excluding currency effects and the impact from deals, GE said its oil revenue was flat while operating profit rose 11 percent.
GE had warned that sales and profits in its oil and gas segment could drop by 5 percent this year. But analysts have said the declines could be much steeper.
“On the oil and gas side, the revenues hung in there,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management. But he cautioned, “The weakness in that business might still be ahead of it.”
Total sales fell 12.5 percent to $29.34 bn, as GE Capital revenue slid 39 percent.
GE’s industrial operating margins rose 1.2 percentage points to 14.6 percent from a year earlier, helped by administrative cost cuts and a greater mix of sales from higher-margin services.
Orders slipped 3 percent, although they were up slightly, excluding currency effects.
GE’s shares soared the most in six years last Friday on the company’s surprise announcement about GE Capital, pleasing investors who said the finance business weighed on GE’s value as an industrial company. The stock is up 8 percent this year through Thursday. (Source: Reuters)

17 Apr 15. Honeywell first-quarter revenue falls due to strong dollar.
Honeywell International Inc (HON.N), a major manufacturer of aircraft electronics and climate control systems, reported a 5 percent fall in quarterly revenue on Friday, hurt by the sale of its friction materials business and a strong dollar. The company also cut its full-year revenue forecast to $39bn-$39.6bn from $40.5bn-$41.1bn, below the average analyst estimate of $40.52bn, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Honeywell gets more than half its revenue from international operations and exports. The dollar .DXY rose 9 percent against a basket of currencies in the first three months of the year. The company sold its friction materials business, which makes auto parts such as drum brake linings, hydraulic components and brake fluid, to Federal Mogul for about $155 m last year. Honeywell’s transportation unit, which included the friction materials business, accounted for about 10 percent of total revenue in 2013. Sales in the company’s aerospace business — its largest — fell 6 percent to $3.61bn in the first quarter, while sales at its automation and controls business fell 3 percent. Excluding the impact of the dollar and the sale of the friction materials business, sales in the aerospace business rose 1 percent. Revenue for the first quarter fell to $9.21bn, missing the aver

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