Cars and Drivers

Ford's Prospects Fall Apart

Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) is the only large company that sells cars and light vehicles in the United States that had a decline in sales this month. According to Kelly Blue Book, the drop was 2.4% to 180,000, compared to the same month last year. In the process, Ford’s share of market fell from 16.2% to 14.5%.

Ford has no ready excuse for its performance. KBB claims sales of all new vehicles sold in the United States rose 9.1% to 1,240,000. Based on the performance of other large manufacturers, Ford’s problem is not isolated to competition with just one or two rivals.

September has been a good month for some of the industry’s largest players. General Motors Co.’s (NYSE: GM) sales rose 15.9% to 217,000. Ford’s other large rival, Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM), had a sales increase of 7% to 176,000. And white-hot Chrysler’s sales rose 17.5% to 168,000, as its market share in September hit 13.5%, compared to 12.6% last year.

ALSO READ: Why Is Ford Discounting the F-Series?

Ford’s press releases about monthly sales are often misleading because they only point to good news. The August headline was:

Ford Fusion, Escape Post Best August Sales Ever; Explorer Achieves Best August Performance Since 2004

A little less visible:

Ford Motor Company U.S. sales totaled 222,174 vehicles in August, up 0.4 percent from a year ago and the best August sales in eight years. Retail sales of 178,800 vehicles increased 2 percent, while fleet sales of 43,374 vehicles declined 6 percent.

Up 0.4%, that is all.

Ford’s largest problem is that while sales of some of its most successful models have improved during the first eight months of the year — Fusion, Escape and Explorer — they have only risen by single digits. Sales of other key models — Taurus, C-Max and Edge — have fallen by double digits. Sales of the Ford’s flagship F-Series pickup were down 0.4% to 497,174. By contrast, Chrysler’s full-sized pickup, the Dodge Ram, has done extremely well.

Although its sales are so small that they barely make a difference, Lincoln remains a tiny part of the luxury market.

Ford will need to have one or two more models that sell in the tens of thousands per year and that can post double-digit sales growth to turn itself around. Those models are evidently not available.

ALSO READ: States Where You Can’t Buy a Tesla

Smart Investors Are Quietly Loading Up on These “Dividend Legends”

If you want your portfolio to pay you cash like clockwork, it’s time to stop blindly following conventional wisdom like relying on Dividend Aristocrats. There’s a better option, and we want to show you. We’re offering a brand-new report on 2 stocks we believe offer the rare combination of a high dividend yield and significant stock appreciation upside. If you’re tired of feeling one step behind in this market, this free report is a must-read for you.

Click here to download your FREE copy of “2 Dividend Legends to Hold Forever” and start improving your portfolio today.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.