Ford moves to second in US EV sales

 

Bloomberg

Ford Motor Co moved to second place in US electric-vehicle sales, behind Tesla Inc. and overtaking General Motors Co., whose Chevrolet Bolt EV has been hobbled by a recall.
Ford’s performance was buoyed by the Mustang Mach-E, which notched 27,140 sales in 2021, its first full year on the market, according to a statement. The automaker is tripling production at the Mexican plant that builds plug-in car. Ford said it is doubling production of the battery-powered F-150 Lightning pickup going on sale this spring, which sent company’s stock to a 20-year high.
The shares added to the gains Wednesday, climbing 1.4% to $24.65 at 11:07 a.m. in New York after the company released results for December and all of 2021. The stock rose 136% last year, making Ford the biggest gainer among auto stocks.
For the year, Ford sold 1.9 million vehicles, finishing in third place in the US race behind GM and new leader Toyota Motor Corp. But Ford noted it had the highest sales among US automakers in the fourth quarter, as it debuted the Maverick small pickup, which sold 13,258 in its first months on the market.
It also said it ended the year with the most inventory of any automaker, despite the continuing chip shortage.
“If we can get to the full levels of production and manage some of the disruptions that we’ve seen as an industry, but certainly as a company, if we can manage that, I think we’re in a good position to grow,” Andrew Frick, Ford’s U.S. sales chief, said on a conference call with reporters.
GM halted production of the Bolt for the final two months of the year as it worked on a fix for a defect that could cause battery fires. Forecaster LMC Automotive sees GM recapturing its second-place spot, though Ford Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley contends his company will pull away with the F-150 Lightning that received nearly 200,000 nonbinding reservations.

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