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						GE profit beats estimates 
						as power revenue jumps 
						
		 
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		 [July 22, 2016] 
		By Alwyn Scott 
           
			NEW YORK (Reuters) - General Electric 
			Co  on Friday reported a sharp rise in adjusted net income in 
			the second quarter, as its aviation, healthcare and power businesses 
			countered weak demand for oil and gas and transportation equipment. 
			A boost from the sale of its appliances business also lifted 
			earnings. 
			 
			GE's adjusted earnings per share of 51 cents a share topped the 46 
			cents a share analysts expected, according to Thomson Reuters 
			I/B/E/S. 
			 
			The figure included a gain of 20 cents a share from the sale of GE's 
			appliances business to Qingdao Haier, which closed in June. The gain 
			was offset by 9 cents in restructuring costs and other items, GE 
			said. 
			 
			GE affirmed its 2016 operating forecast and said it expects strong 
			growth to continue in the second half. 
			
			  
			“The diversity and scale of our portfolio enabled the company to 
			perform well despite a volatile and slow growth economy," GE Chief 
			Executive Jeffrey Immelt said in a statement. 
			 
			Revenue rose 15 percent to $33.49 billion, helped by a 31 percent 
			rise from the power business. Sales from continuing industrial 
			operations, known as organic segment revenue, fell 1 percent to 
			$24.4 billion, less than some analysts had expected. 
			 
			GE shares were at $32.39 in pre-market trading, down from Thursday's 
			closing price of $32.59 on the New York Stock Exchange. 
			 
			During the quarter, the maker of power plants, aircraft engines, 
			locomotives and other industrial equipment returned $18 billion to 
			shareholders through share buybacks. 
			
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			The logo of U.S. conglomerate General Electric is pictured at the 
			company's site in Belfort, April 27, 2014. REUTERS/Vincent 
			Kessler/File Photo 
            
			
  
It shed its designation as a non-bank systemically important financial 
institution after divesting most of its GE Capital business, a change expected 
to free about $18 billion in capital, which GE had pledged to return to 
shareholders through buybacks. The sale of the GE Capital units also positions 
GE to take on debt to fund acquisitions and growth. 
 
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Kirti Pandey and W Simon) 
				 
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