Ford Motor Company

NYSE: F
$10.78
+$0.10 (+0.9%)
Closing Price on September 27, 2024

F Articles

Ford is upbeat as sales and production recover, and focusing on trucks and internet connectivity.
Ford, General Electric and these other stocks are likely to survive the current troubles and could very well offer patient investors some huge returns over the next year or so.
Ford's F-150 has been the best-selling vehicle in the United States for decades. The pickup is getting a makeover for the 2021 model year and will debut as an electric vehicle in mid-2022.
Toyota is no longer the most valuable car company as measured by market capitalization. That honor now belongs to Tesla, even though Tesla sells a fraction of the vehicles Toyota does each year.
Ford stock has lagged the market but could get a lift as workers return to factories and buyers return to showrooms.
The pandemic has caused supply and demand problems for Ford and damaged consumer confidence.
Ford will likely have the summertime blues when it comes to reaching its sales goals. How bad those blues will be depends on the pandemic, unemployment numbers, and consumer sentiment.
May U.S. car sales are expected to be down sharply from a year ago. That shows the long road to a comeback for America's large carmakers.
It may seem improbable that a huge discount warehouse company can help a car company that is desperate to find buyers. Yet, Costco is doing just that.
Car sales in Europe imploded in April, hurting the ambitions of two of America's largest car companies.
Even as Ford plants reopen the coronavirus has cut demand and rattled the supply chain, as well as shareholders.
Uber has run out of ways to attract riders while the spread of COVID-19 requires safety rules and social distancing. Revenue has collapsed.
This Detroit automaker needs to get back on track, and the only way they can do that is by restarting production in a safe but effective way before it falls to penny stock status.
Ford has reopened plants in China and Europe and plans to follow in North American on May 18. The move towards electrics remains a big push for the company, even for its best-selling vehicle, the...
Ford intends to restart the assembly lines at its North American factories on May 18. The plants have been closed since March 19 because of the coronavirus pandemic.