Ford cruises by chip shortage, boosts outlook
By Kathi on Jul 29, 2021 | 03:39 AM IST
The global semiconductor shortage led the company to slash
production in half
Ford Motor Co.
revved up surprise second-quarter profits this year – powered by climbing
pickup and SUV prices even as a global computer chip shortage forced it to pump
the brakes on production, which dropped by roughly half.
The company reported revenue of $26.8 billion and net
income of $561 million – beating expectations and fueling hopes for the future
of Ford+, the company’s new business plan.
"Ford+ is about creating distinctive products and
services, always-on customer relationships and user experiences that keep
improving," Ford President and CEO Jim Farley said in a statement.
"And it’s already happening – there are great examples everywhere you turn
at Ford, and the benefits for our customers and company will really stack up
over time."
The company also touted 120,000 reservations for the new
electric F-150 Lightning and soaring Mustang Mach-E and Bronco orders – making
the company "spring loaded" for a surge in sales when global supply
lines recover from a semiconductor shortage that has impacted companies in a
range of industries.
Production of the new Lightning is also creating 500 jobs
at the company’s Rogue Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn, Mich.
The chip shortage is expected to last at least another
year, according to some experts – although the company has reportedly mulled
shipping incomplete vehicles to dealer lots, where the chips can be installed
as they come in.
But despite the stalled production, soaring demand for new
Ford vehicles allowed the company to lower incentives and still rake in sales.
To keep pace, the company used what chips it had available on its most
profitable vehicles.
In June, Ford's sales of electrified vehicles increased
117% for the month and set a half-year record of 56,570 vehicles. Meanwhile,
Ford's overall vehicle sales for the month plummeted 26.9% year-over-year as
the auto industry continues to feel the pain from an ongoing semiconductor chip
shortage.
"We’re on a new path, with the Ford+ plan, financial
flexibility and a resolve to make us an even stronger company," CFO John
Lawler said in a statement. "We’re developing connected, high-quality
vehicles and services that are great for customers and profitable for
Ford."
Ford’s earnings came in at 13 cents per share –
dramatically beating out projections of 3-cent losses, according to FactSet.
The strong showing lifted the company’s projected full-year
pretax income to between $9 billion and $10 billion – an improvement of about
$3.5 billion.
Ford also reported "persistent, growing strength"
in Europe and the success of its Lincoln brand in China – where the U.S.
automaker reported its highest ever quarterly retail sales.
But Lawler told the Associated Press that increased prices
for raw materials will take about $2 billion out of Ford’s pretax income in the
second half. And Ford’s credit subsidiary is expected to see pretax profits
drop by about a billion dollars as lease returns are expected to drop in value.
Ford has been accelerating its drive toward electric
vehicles as well – announcing a new battery factory in Romulus, Mich., set to
open up next year.
The new collaborative learning lab, dubbed Ford Ion Park,
represents $100 million of the automaker's total $185 million investment in
developing, testing and building electric vehicle battery cells and cell
arrays. It is also part of the company's $30 billion investment in
electrification by 2025.