Ford (NYSE: F | F Price Prediction) and General Motors (NYSE: GM) recently posted Q1 2026 results, and the contrast in how each is returning cash was the most striking takeaway. GM authorized a new $6 billion buyback in January and lifted its dividend. Ford kept its payout flat and bought back a fraction of that. Same industry, very different playbooks.
Buybacks Carry GM. Reinvestment Carries Ford.
GM produced $2.95 billion in operating cash flow in Q1 and repurchased $800 million of stock, on top of $6.04 billion bought back across 2025. The diluted share count fell to 926 million from 1.002 billion year over year. CEO Mary Barra raised the dividend 20% to $0.18 per quarter and lifted full-year EBIT-adjusted guidance to $13.5 billion to $15.5 billion. GMNA margin reached 10.1%, and GM took a $1.08 billion charge to right-size its EV capacity rather than chase volume.
Ford went the other way. CEO Jim Farley used Q1 to fund growth and reinvestment. The $311 million in Q1 buybacks is roughly a rounding error against GM’s pace, and Ford ran $0 in annual repurchases from 2021 through 2025. The dividend stayed at $0.15 quarterly. Cash is going into Ford Energy, Ford Pro software (subs up 30% to 879,000), and a Model e program still generating losses of $4.0 billion to $4.5 billion this year.
Where the Capital Really Goes
| Lens | Ford | GM |
| Q1 2026 Buybacks | $311M | $800M |
| Quarterly Dividend | $0.15 | $0.18 (raised 20%) |
| Dividend Yield | 3.6% | 0.7% |
| Forward P/E | 10 | 7 |
| Core Bet | Ford Energy, EV ramp | Truck margins, shrinking float |
Farley framed it this way: “We are well-prepared to deliver for our customers and shareholders as we enter one of the most intensive product, software, and physical services rollouts in our history.” Translation: cash is earmarked for the build.
The Next Test Is Cash Discipline
Investors will be watching whether GM can keep buying back stock without sliding into negative free cash flow. For Ford, the question is simpler: does Model e narrow losses fast enough to justify skipping buybacks while the stock trades below $17?
Why GM Is Currently Winning the Cash-Return Game
For income-focused investors, Ford’s 3.6% yield is hard to ignore, and continued growth in Ford Pro software keeps the thesis alive. However, GM’s combination of a shrinking share count, raised guidance, and a cheaper forward multiple makes for a more disciplined capital-return setup. Ford rallied 63.7% over the past year and GM 72.3%, so the market already senses the gap. If Ford Energy starts producing real revenue, or if GM’s tariff exposure widens beyond the current $2.5 billion to $3.5 billion band, that might be reason to reconsider.