GE, which is divesting most of its finance arm, reported a 4.5 per cent increase in industrial operating profits to USD 4.5 billion, behind gains in five of seven sectors, including power and water and aviation.
However, profits in the oil services business fell 11.5 percent to USD 584 million as the downturn in the petroleum industry prompted GE's oil-producer clients to cut investment.
Net income was USD 2.5 billion, down 29.1 per cent from the year-ago period, which was boosted by profits from finance operations that are no longer counted.
GE chief executive Jeff Immelt gave a mostly positive outlook on the global economy, characterizing the US as steadily growing and Europe as "appreciably better," even as emerging markets face some headwinds.
"On balance, we've seen as much activity as we've ever seen," Immelt said in response to an analyst question on the prospects for a global industrial recession.
"The picture is slow growth and volatility ... And there are still pockets of growth," he said.
Immelt characterized GE's China business as "still pretty good."
GE announced Wednesday that it won approval from the US Federal Reserve to separate out the consumer finance company Synchrony Financial. GE currently owns 84.6 percent of Synchrony but plans to reduce this holding by letting investors exchange GE stock for Symphony shares.
Near 1500 GMT, shares of GE were up 1.9 percent at $28.53. The shares initially fell after analyst notes highlighted a 26 percent drop in third-quarter orders to $23.2 billion.
However shares moved higher after Immelt told analysts GE was poised to win big deals in the fourth quarter in aviation, power, locomotives and power conversion.
