KEY POINTS
  • General Motors is working to regain Wall Street's confidence heading into 2024 with several investor-focused initiatives Wednesday following a tumultuous year.
  • The Detroit automaker is initiating a stock buyback, increasing its dividend and reinstating its full-year 2023 guidance.
  • GM CEO Mary Barra in a statement said the company is finalizing a budget for next year that will "fully offset the incremental costs of our new labor agreements."

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General Motors is working to regain Wall Street's confidence heading into 2024 with several investor-focused initiatives Wednesday following a tumultuous year of labor strikes and setbacks in its plans for electric and autonomous vehicles.

The Detroit automaker plans to increase its quarterly dividend next year by 33% to 12 cents per share; initiate an accelerated $10 billion share repurchase program; and reinstate its 2023 guidance to include an estimated $1.1 billion in earnings before interest and tax, or EBIT-adjusted, impact from roughly six weeks of U.S. labor strikes by the United Auto Workers union.

In this article