Ford Cuts Production As Profit Hopes Fade
High Gas Prices, Weak Economy Prompt Automaker's Decision
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Ford said in addition to realigning its manufacturing capacity to produce more small cars and crossovers, it plans to accelerate the North American introduction of some of its small cars from Europe and South America. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
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The Dearborn-based automaker also cut back its projections for total U.S. sales in 2008 to between 15 million and 15.4 million vehicles. That's down from 17 million vehicles as recently as 2005.
"Unless there is a fairly rapid turnaround in U.S. business conditions, which we are not anticipating, it now looks like it will take longer than expected to achieve our North American Automotive profitability goal," Ford President and Chief Executive Alan Mulally said in a statement.
Ford said it will cut production by 15 percent in the second quarter, 15 to 20 percent in the third quarter and 2 to 8 percent in the fourth quarter. The cuts will primarily affect pickups and sport utility vehicles, which have seen sales plummet in recent months due to rising gas prices and the slowdown in new home construction.
Ford plans to increase its production of cars and crossovers through additional shifts and overtime. Ford's smallest offering, the Focus sedan, saw sales jump 29 percent in the first four months of this year, while its Ford Edge crossover was up 38 percent.
But the company's mix of vehicles remains heavily tilted to trucks and SUVs. Ford's F-series trucks, long the best-selling vehicles in the U.S., were down 16 percent in the same period.
Ford said in addition to realigning its manufacturing capacity to produce more small cars and crossovers, it plans to accelerate the North American introduction of some of its small cars from Europe and South America.
Ford had said in March it planned to cut second-quarter production by 10 percent and confirmed additional cuts at a factory in Michigan earlier this week. But it revealed the full extent of the cuts Thursday.
Production cuts hurt revenues, because automakers book vehicles as sold once they leave the factory.
Consumers have been shifting to smaller, more fuel efficient cars in the last few months at a pace that stunned the industry. Through April, U.S. sales of subcompact cars shot up 33 percent, while sales of large SUVs were down 29 percent, according to Autodata Inc. Overall U.S. sales were down 8 percent in that period.
Ford said it is on track to reduce North American automotive operating costs by $5 billion by the end of this year. But it said the rising price of steel and other commodities are offsetting expected gains from its new contract with the United Auto Workers.
Ford shares fell 28 cents, or 4 percent, to $7.52 in premarket trading.
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It serves you basttards right for screwwing me on my 2002 F-150. I can understand that cars and trucks have problems, but YOU EVIL SUCCKERS went way out of your way to NOT HONOR my warranty - an EXTENDED warranty I paid extra for.
It was only after I filed a claim in small claims court, that you FINALLY caved in and honored your end of the agreement.
I gladly look forward to your continued demise, and can''t wait until your doors are finally closed for good.
Posted by labombaOH at 12:17 PM : May 22, 2008
I own a Toyota now, and only had one little problem with it (running a little rough). They replaced the computer control module for free (the problem), and washed my car and gave me a coupon for a free oil change.
THAT is how Ford should honor their warranties, instead of going out of their way to bone their customers.
F*** ''em.
Can you rememeber when American ingenuity and manufacturing actually set the pace?
Posted by oly_joe at 01:25 AM : May 23, 2008
I agree that there are lemons now and again - read my original posts.
The response to how those lemons get repaired is the real issue. When you have a foreign car and something goes wrong, they stand behind it and fix the problem. Ford went way out of their way to screw me when I had problems, and I know I''m not alone.
Not only that, but more and more people are having nothing but problems with their new Fords. On top of NOT honoring their warranties and standing behind their vehicles, they''re also rolling more junk off the lines than ever before.
F*** ''em - I''ll never go back. I look forward to their bankruptcy.
These idiots lobbied Congress hard to not up fuel efficiency standards while Toyota and Honda made it a priority. Now American manufacturers are scrambling to catch up and probably won''t for some time.
The response to how those lemons get repaired is the real issue. When you have a foreign car and something goes wrong, they stand behind it and fix the problem. Ford went way out of their way to screw me when I had problems, and I know I''''m not alone.
Not only that, but more and more people are having nothing but problems with their new Fords. On top of NOT honoring their warranties and standing behind their vehicles, they''''re also rolling more junk off the lines than ever before.
F*** ''''em - I''''ll never go back. I look forward to their bankruptcy.
Posted by hungry1968 at 09:13 AM : May 23, 2008
I feel the same way about GM
I feel that many millions of people will have to give up their jobs because they cant afford the petrol to get to work and others will cut back on their use of cars plus they will reduce to only one car per family, thus manufacturers will loose trillions in the process, but it serves them right.. For years now they and oil companies have stopped any production of alternative forms of energy and transportation, they have either brought and destroyed the plans of any one who has come up with alternate ideas or they have kept these ideas in hiding...
1. Build ''em better; don''t import cheap parts from factories that only care about cheap profits. I haven''t driven a Ford lately, because the last two I had driven really had to be fixed or repaired daily... Never mind the problems relatives had... :(
2. Ditch SUVs and go for higher mileage vehicles and hybrids. Only certain families need that much space for so little reason, and anyone with 18 kids is a selfish jerk.
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by bcweitzel
May 25, 2008 5:38 PM EDT
- Posted by Glidescube:
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Reply to this comment
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See all 17 Comments"The response to how those lemons get repaired is the real issue. When you have a foreign car and something goes wrong, they stand behind it and fix the problem. Ford went way out of their way to screw me when I had problems, and I know Im not alone."
Oh, you mean like Toyota and Honda?
Bad news there, bub, they''re both made in the US! American Honda Motor Co started manufacturing cars in the US in 1982 with the Accord. Toyota, also in 1982, joined forces with *GM* for their first manufacturing facility in the US headquartered in Fremont, CA.
Pretty sure that most other "foreign" cars are already or will in the next few years be manufactured here because of import tariffs and the cost savings and extreme repeatibility of robotics and automation hardware.
I gotta laugh whenever somebody says Honda and Toyota are foreign... but if that floats your boat, then by all means keep paying higher prices for "foreign" cars! :-)