Live Trading News
Shayne Heffernan

General Motors (NYSE:GM) Outlook Positive

By Shayne Heffernan2 min read

General Motors (NYSE:GM) Outlook Positive

General Motors (NYSE:GM) reported Tuesday an annual drop in US auto sales despite a strong fourth quarter that reflected a surprisingly robust recovery from the disruption of Covid-19.

General Motors (NYSE:GM)
General Motors (NYSE:GM)

The biggest US automaker cited continued consumer hunger for pickup trucks, sport utility vehicles and other large cars, enabling GM to score record average transaction prices in the fourth quarter and full year.

But overall sales for 2020 still fell 11.8 percent to 2.5 million compared with 2019, reflecting the hit from a nearly two-month disruption to auto manufacturing due to the initial US Covid-19 outbreak in the spring.

General Motors (NYSE:GM)
General Motors (NYSE:GM)

Since that time, GM and other auto giants have overhauled plants to respect social distancing protocols, enabling car output to return roughly to pre-Covid-19 levels.

In the fourth quarter, GM reported a 4.8 percent increase in US auto sales to 771,323, topping analyst estimates.

The auto giant also disclosed that inventories at the end of 2020 stood at about 33 percent below the year-ago levels, but offered an upbeat outlook for the year.

"We look forward to an inflection point for the US economy in the spring," said GM Chief Economist Elaine Buckberg.

"Widening vaccination rates and warmer weather should enable consumers and businesses to return to a more normal range of activities, lifting the job market, consumer sentiment and auto demand."

Despite elevated unemployment, US auto sales have been relatively strong in the second half of 2020.

Join now to earn passive income generated from your crypto assets and our Fintech

Analysts have pointed to the lift from federal support programs to consumers, as well as the shifting of funds from travel and other discretionary items to autos and bigger-ticket purchases, such as home improvement.

Still, US auto sales for 2020 are projected to drop 15.3 percent to 14.4 million, according to Cox Automotive, in what would be lowest year since at least 2012.

Advertisement
Target150
Keep reading
Ontology

Ontology Is the Idea Finance Has Been Missing

The world created around 181 zettabytes of data in 2025, and AI adds more every day than anyone can read. The scarce resource is no longer data or compute. It is understanding, and understanding is a picture. Shayne Heffernan on ontology, the visual layer that turns infinite data into insight, and why finance, banking and regulation need it most.

Shayne Heffernan18 min
Week Ahead

Economic Calendar and Trading Strategies for the Week Ahead: July 14–18, 2026

A pivotal week for markets: US strikes on Iran reignite the oil risk premium, June CPI and retail sales test the Fed's rate-cut path, and the $1 trillion AI capital loop keeps driving the tech trade. Full economic calendar plus trading strategies across oil, gold, Bitcoin, FX and AI stocks.

Shayne Heffernan25 min
Ontology

Ontology: Agentic AI and Infrastructure

The AI trade so far has been a compute trade. The next leg is a meaning trade — and ontology, secured and settled, is the layer almost everyone is skipping. Shayne Heffernan on why ontology is the missing layer in agentic AI, and the infrastructure it needs.

Shayne Heffernan15 min
quantum computing

Quantum Computing Just Became an Institutional Risk

Shayne Heffernan on BlackRock's quantum-computing warning for Bitcoin and Ethereum, Google's cryptanalysis research, the two on-chain risk vectors, and how KXCO's Armature L1 — post-quantum from genesis, coordinated by its ontology — answers a threat that just went institutional.

Shayne Heffernan10 min
Read Live Trading News on Telegram

Every story, signed and delivered.

Subscribe to the kxco channel and get the headline, the AI-written key takeaways, and the chain-anchor link the moment we publish. Audio versions and per-ticker subscriptions arrive in the next iteration.

Open @KnightsbridgeInsightsNo email required.