Ford Motor Co; Writing off $19.5b investments in EVs.
(F;Ba1/BBB-neg/BBB-)
Wall Street Journal reported and company followed up with press release. F will take a $19.5b charge to write down investments in its EV business. We think this announcement will be met with relief from most investors and think the agencies will hold tight at current ratings. While it will mean large cash charges over the next two years and asset write-downs, it should improve adjusted margins. If F can hold market share and remain competitive in hybrids and ICE trucks this can turn into a positive development for F going forward.
• Most of the charges will come in Q4, though some will be in '26 and '27. Cash impacts of up to $5.5b will be felt primarily in '26, with the remainder in '27.
• Mngt gave updated guidance: FY25 EBIT guidance now at $7b and reaffirmed FCF to $2-3b. F will report FY25 results on Feb 10.
• Mngt has stated they intend to hire more workers going forward under its new plan. No mention of layoffs of UAW members.
• As previously mentioned, Ford will stop manufacturing the F-150 Lightening and is cancelling electric vans in both Europe and the US. Its BlueOval Plant in Tenn will be renamed and used to make a new ICE truck. Its Ohio plant will now make ICE and hybrid vans. Money earmarked for EVs will now be spent on hybrids and ICE vehicles.
• F has lost $13b on EVs since 2023. It had said in 2022 that it would invest as much as $50b in EVs though we know that number was scaled back starting in 2023. Ford likely has spent between $25-$40b on EVs depending on what metrics are used.
• F stating this move was taken due to regulatory change under the Trump administration and low consumer demand for EVs.
• F plans to convert it battery production facility in Kentucky to one that manufactures battery storage products and will target utilities and data center operators as its customers.
Find more articles and bullets on these widgets:
Canadian analysts' expectations for October inflation:

Canadian CPI is expected to have pulled back in October from September's 7-month high 2.4% Y/Y. Consensus (Bloomberg median) sees October CPI at 2.2% Y/Y (2.4% prior), with M/M at 0.2% (0.1% prior), while the average Median/Trim measure is seen at 3.05% (3.15% prior).

Equities recovered from a sharp intraday sell-off to close roughly flat Friday, with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 almost unchanged but the the Dow Jones retracing 0.7% after Thursday's outperformance.
