Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Ford Earns Money Even If Automotive Sales Decline By 30%


Ford CFO Bob Shanks claimed that the company took the necessary measures to earn money even if automotive sale decline by 30%.

Ford responding to investor fears that the American automobile market is reaching its peak. It told analysts it could still be profitable even if sales by the automotive industry declined by 30% in 1 year.
Investors traded down the shares of the American automaker by 3.6% in 2016 on March 22, 2016, due to their concern that the United States automotive expansion has reached its peak and incomes are pressurized.
The carmaker, which recorded a pre-tax profit of $10.8 billion for 2015, is seen as one who could suffer from the same situation, which it faced 7 years ago when it had to close down factories, cut a large number of jobs and mortgage it’s every asset to borrow life-saving loans.
“We were in such bad shape back then. We are a much different company now,” CFO Bob Shanks spoke to analysts while meeting them in New York.
Ford stock plunged 0.5% to $13.59 at the close of trading in New York. Now, the company could reach the breakeven level financially even if the annual US vehicle sales decline to 11 million units, 37% decrease from 2015’s record 17.5 million light trucks and cars, Shanks stated.
Due to lower costs, better balance sheet and stronger products, the Michigan-based organization is now in a position to keep earning profits with a decline by 30% in the industry-wide sales, 2% decrease in net sales revenue in the first year of the decline, he stated. If sales did not rebound in 2017, the profit of the carmaker would actually enhance, Shanks stated.
In an auto market collapse, Ford could lower down its costs by $3 billion in the first year, with a sum of $1 billion being generated from its production operations. Bob stated, “We would adjust production to fit demand and do that very, very quickly.”
To prove how the US organization is more nimble-witted now, Bob pointed out the measures taken by Ford to adjust its factory output to a cut down in demand for fuel-efficient small vehicles.
Ford laid off 700 employees at its small-car manufacturing plant in Michigan and aims to move manufacturing of vehicles outside US. It also stopped manufacturing its mid-sized Fusion sedan and now manufactures it just in Mexico, where costs of labor are lower.
The carmaker aims to keep investing in new vehicles in the upcoming downturn, maintain its investment-grade credit rating and dividend. It was facilitated by latest credit upgrades, which “gives us a little bit of extra cushion,” Bob stated.

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