GE's (NYSE: GE) Oil and Gas Sector Boosts Q4 Results

Brian Hicks

Written By Brian Hicks

Posted January 21, 2013

General Electric’s (NYSE: GE) foray into the oil and gas sector has returned good results; the company was able to see its net income go up 8 percent in Q4, while also tallying up $210 billion in backlogged orders.

Net income amounted to $4 billion, or 38 cents per share, resulting in a profit of 44 cents per share. Per-share prices for GE rose to $21.95, up 3.1 percent.

Under Jeffrey Immelt, GE has renewed focus on its industrial operations, such as industrial equipment, services to industrial businesses, etc., while forging ahead into providing equipment and support services to the oil and gas industry. That’s a smart move considering the ongoing oil and gas boom across North America driven by shale discoveries and explorations.

It’s that move that has proven key for GE in the latest quarter, with the company’s oil and gas, energy management, aviation, and transportation segments each posting growth higher than 10 percent, as USA Today reports.

GE’s net income based on total revenues of $147.4 billion was $13.6 billion for 2012, and both are expected to increase through 2013.

New contracts have been unveiled with Brazil’s Petrobras and Chevron’s (NYSE: CVX) Angola projects, and the company has received enough orders for jet engines to supply 50 airplanes for Alaska Airlines.

Angel Publishing Investor Club Discord - Chat Now

Brian Hicks Premium

Introductory

3 Stocks for Lithium's 4,000% Rise

The single most important geological discovery of our generation has just taken place. And it could be responsible for a MASSIVE rise in lithium prices. The best part? A Tiny mining firm is at the forefront of mining the world's largest lithium deposit... And it's not overseas in some politically unstable nation... Every single ounce of this record-breaking deposit is right here in America. Our latest report highlights this story and offers you access to our FREE Report that details 3 lithium stocks to buy now.

Sign up to receive your free report. After signing up, you'll begin receiving the Energy and Capital e-letter daily.