General Motors net profit tumbled 40% in the second quarter, hurt by a loss in China and supply-chain troubles that left the company with tens of thousands of unfinished vehicles it couldn’t sell during the period.

GM executives reaffirmed the auto maker’s full-year profit outlook, saying they expect production to increase sharply in the second half as the computer-chip shortage eases, and that consumers continue to pay top dollar for new vehicles.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

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