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

You May Also Like

Shootings in Washington, D.C., and Baltimore lead to 3 dead and 9 wounded

Three people died and nine were wounded in separate, “unacceptable” shootings just…

Economy Week Ahead: Factories, Layoffs, Consumer Spending

Wednesday brings a full slate of economic data during a holiday-shortened week…

FDA, J&J Near Deal for Covid-19 Vaccine Production at Baltimore Plant

WASHINGTON—The Food and Drug Administration and vaccine maker Johnson & Johnson JNJ…

Mother of six killed in North Carolina road rage shooting, police say

A Pennsylvania mom of six was killed in a road rage shooting…