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Do June Ford Sales Signal a Rebound?

By Jim Motavalli | Jul 2, 2009

There has been abundant confirmation that Ford’s decision to opt-out of government TARP financing—a move made possible by CEO Alan Mulally’s prescient borrowing of $23 billion against its assets in 2006—has multiple benefits. People seem to be retaining their confidence in Ford cars and trucks, and it’s starting to show up in sales figures—which are still down, but not as dire as they might be.

For one thing, Ford’s “financial viability” (meaning, not in bankruptcy court) ensured that it would receive $5.9 billion in federal advanced technology funding through 2011 to make its existing models, from the Taurus to the Focus, 25 percent more fuel efficient. General Motors and Chrysler may get funded, too, but only Ford received this boon in the first round (along with Nissan and Tesla).

In June, Ford sales were down 10.7 percent compared to June 2008, but GM dropped 33 percent in the same period, and Chrysler 42 percent. Ford also outsold Toyota for the third month in a row. Strong Fusion and Flex sales were cited as one reason for an uptick.

Ford could get into positive territory as its new products come on line. Crucial for the automaker is the 2010 Taurus, which has been dramatically made over and is moving somewhat upmarket. Business Week calls the Taurus (starting at $26,000, the same as the model it replaces) “styled and packaged just right.” The new car bristles with features, including adaptive cruise, collision warning, blind spot information system, rain-sensing wipers, capless refueling, and a new generation of its SYNC audio system. Here’s a first video drive of the new Taurus:

The new Euro-rooted Fiesta and Focus are moving forward, and the Fiesta is being pre-marketed with a smart youth-oriented campaign that includes 100 Twitter-friendly bloggers using the cars for six months. The Focus, in a partnership with Magna Internationalwill be the basis of a new electric battery car in 2011, and Ford is also working on a plug-in hybrid for 2012.

The new, leaner Ford has also jettisoned Jaguar and Land Rover (to India’s Tata, generating $2.3 billion), gotten out of the supercar business by selling Aston Martin, reduced its share in Mazda, and is no doubt working overtime to sever its relationship with Volvo. The Fusion Hybrid is a very credible entry in the field. And the company is also trying to reinvigorate the stagnant Lincoln and Mercury brands with a new Fusion-based luxury sedan and SUVs grouped around “MK” branding.

Executive Chairman Bill Ford said that “Alan was the right choice [to be CEO], and it gets more right every day.” Of course, Ford is hardly out of the woods. Sales are, after all, still down. But it hasn’t made any significantly wrong moves in its attempt to recover from the auto industry’s worst slump since the Depression.

Jim Motavalli is the author of Forward Drive: The Race to Build Clean Cars for the Future, among other books. He has been covering the environmental side of the auto industry for more than a decade, and writes regularly on those topics for the New York Times.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Ford's Mulally Is The $13 Million Man

    BusinessWeek - 243 days 16 hours 45 minutes ago

    Posted by: David Kiley on March 24 Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulallyâ??s total compensation for 2008 dropped by 37% to $13.6 million last year. That's still a hefty sum, considering Fordâ??s record losses and continued financial fragility. Meanwhile, Mulally -- who, like his counterparts at General Motors (GM) and Chrysler, was excoriated by...

  • Mulally endorses new fuel economy standards

    The Detroit News - 188 days 15 hours 40 minutes ago

    The following is Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulallys statement on President Obama's fuel-economy announcement: We are pleased President Obama is taking decisive and positive action as we work together toward one national standard for vehicle fuel economy and greenhouse gas emissions that will benefit the environment and the economy....

  • Ford's Alan Mulally Talks About the Road to Recovery

    BNET Auto - 119 days 13 hours 11 minutes ago

    Is Ford recovering? Could be. As Jim Henry reportedon BNETlast week, the company may have lost more than $14 billion last year, but it posted a net income of $2.3 billion for the second quarter, compared to a net loss of $8.7 billion a year ago. The recovery picture is, of course, complicated, but Fords relative strength when...

  • Ford's Electric Car...Built on the SUV Line

    BNET Auto - 178 days 7 hours 47 minutes ago

    Its a sign of the times. Fords new Focus-based electric vehicle (EV), will be built in a Wayne, Michigan factory that once built nothing but SUVsand supplied half of Fords worldwide profits. The Focus itself was designed in Europe and will debut in 2011. Its a world car, destined to sell two million units around the...

  • Alan Mulally, Ford CEO has it all going on

    The Detroit News - 140 days 12 hours 48 minutes ago

    Just a few short years ago, when Bill Ford Jr. was CEO of Ford Motor Co. the fortunes of the Dearborn automaker were slip sliding away. Even President of North American operations Mark Fields who was Fords No. 1 guy in Europe could not gain traction with his Way Forward campaign as Ford lost market share and common stock...

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