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GE HealthCare cuts annual profit forecast as inflation weighs on costs

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 7:09 AM

April 29 (Reuters) – Medical equipment maker GE HealthCare on Wednesday cut its full-year profit forecast on the back of inflation-driven cost pressures, sending its shares ​down more than 9% in premarket trading.

The company ‌also missed Wall Street estimates for first-quarter profit due to a supplier issue in its diagnostic business, which it said has since been resolved.

“We saw significant increases in memory chips, oil and freight costs ‌during ​the first quarter that we assume ⁠will impact the rest ⁠of 2026,” CEO Peter Arduini said.

He added that the company expects to offset more than half of the inflation impact with price and cost actions.

GE HealthCare expects ​2026 adjusted profit of $4.80 to $5 per share, compared with its prior forecast of $4.95 to $5.15.

The company’s first-quarter adjusted earnings ⁠of $0.99 per share missed analysts’ estimate ⁠of $1.05, according to data compiled by LSEG.

J.P. ​Morgan analysts said they were “unsurprised” by the share weakness, given ​the mixed results that included “stronger-than-expected top-line performance balanced against ‌disruption down the P&L and lowered guidance.”

Despite rising costs and currency swings, GE HealthCare said demand for its diagnostic and imaging devices has been healthy across regions.

The company ⁠expects the impact from tariffs in 2026 to be lower than last year, based on current rates.

Its first-quarter revenue rose 7.4% ⁠to $5.13 billion from ‌a year ago, topping expectations of $5.04 billion.

The ⁠imaging devices unit, the largest of its ​four segments, ‌posted a 7.4% rise in its quarterly ​sales of $2.30 ⁠billion, beating expectations of about $2.19 billion.

That strength was partly offset by a decline in the patient care solutions business, where quarterly revenue fell 6.5% to $704 million due to softer demand, the company said.

(Reporting by Sahil Pandey in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Shreya Biswas)