Discontinued — last reported Q3 '17

Equity Method Investments

Non-Current Assets

General Electric Equity Method Investments decreased by 4.3% to $1.83B in Q4 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric declined by 14.7%, from $2.15B to $1.83B. Over 2 years (FY 2023 to FY 2025), Equity Method Investments shows a downward trend with a -28.2% CAGR. This decline may warrant attention — for this metric, higher values are generally preferred.

Analysis

StatementBalance Sheet Statement
SectionNon-Current Assets
CategoryMarket Position
SignalHigher is better
VolatilityStable
First reportedQ3 2015
Last reportedQ3 2017

How to read this metric

An increase reflects profitable performance by affiliates or new strategic partnerships.

Detailed definition

Investments in companies where the firm exerts significant influence but does not have full control, typically represent...

Peer comparison

Standard across large holding companies and industrial conglomerates to track the value of non-controlled strategic stakes.

Metric ID: equity_method_investments

Historical Data

9 periods
 Q4 '23Q1 '24Q2 '24Q3 '24Q4 '24Q1 '25Q2 '25Q3 '25Q4 '25
Value$3.56B$3.65B$2.41B$2.38B$2.15B$2.14B$2.17B$1.92B$1.83B
QoQ Change+2.6%-34.1%-1.2%-9.6%-0.6%+1.5%-11.7%-4.3%
YoY Change-39.5%-41.4%-9.8%-19.4%-14.7%
Range$1.83B$3.65B
CAGR-28.2%
Avg YoY Growth-24.9%
Median YoY Growth-19.4%
Current Streak2 quarters decline

Frequently Asked Questions

What is General Electric's equity method investments?
General Electric (GEV) reported equity method investments of $1.83B in Q4 2025.
How has General Electric's equity method investments changed year-over-year?
General Electric's equity method investments decreased by 14.7% year-over-year, from $2.15B to $1.83B.
What is the long-term trend for General Electric's equity method investments?
Over 2 years (2023 to 2025), General Electric's equity method investments has grown at a -28.2% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $3.56B to $1.83B.
What does equity method investments mean?
Ownership stakes in other companies that are large enough to influence but not control.

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