US industrial giant General Electric trimmed costs and grew sales despite a slowing global economy to push up earnings 8.3 percent in the third quarter, the company announced Friday.
The builder of aircraft engines, locomotives, wind turbines and a broad range of other heavy industrial products earned $3.49 billion in the quarter, compared to $3.22 billion a year earlier.
Sales were up 6.1 percent, to $24.5 billion, while costs grew just 2.2 percent.
Income growth was spread evenly between the company’s manufacturing operations and its financial services division GE Capital, where net earnings rose 7.8 percent to $1.6 billion.
GE said all of its industrial divisions had positive earnings growth for the first time in seven years.
Its order book was mixed: infrastructure orders were five percent lower, due mainly to a fall in wind turbine demand; but other infrastructure segments remained strong.
The company said that despite a challenging global environment, it is “on track to deliver double-digit earnings growth in 2012” in both its industrial and GE Capital groups.
“The global economy is uncertain, and we are prepared for a variety of economic outcomes,” said chief executive Jeffrey Immelt.
“We will continue to invest to win in our markets, while aggressively managing our overall cost structure.”