Ford Motor Company

NYSE: F
$11.26
+$0.25 (+2.3%)
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F Articles

December auto sales are expected to be a bit below December 2015 totals, but full-year totals could top 2015's record of 17.4 million units sold.
While moves among the most shorted stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange overall were mixed but mild, short sellers found one stock to pile on between the November 30 and December 15...
As the stock market inches toward the end of the year, among the four car manufacturers that sell the most cars in the United States, there is one clear loser in the stock market.
Chevy has taken discounts to an extreme level, with incentives as high as $10,000 for several of its trucks and sport utility vehicles.
December's car sales are expected to be the best for any month of 2016, and the manufacturer with the best results is market leader General Motors.
Incentives alone won't sell cars, sport utility vehicles and pickups, and that means that carmakers are going to have to take steps to reduce inventories, and the traditional method for doing that is...
Ford must have an inventory problem with some models of its F-150 pickup, the company's flagship vehicle. It will bear careful watching to see if the discounts spread.
If you think that new cars and light trucks are getting more expensive, you're right. The average transaction price for a new vehicle hit an all-time high in 2016.
New car registrations in the European Union for the month of November totaled 1.15 million units, and the top-selling carmaker there is Volkswagen.
Judging by moves among the most shorted stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange, short sellers took a cautious approach late last month,
Barclays sees signs of "elevated sentiment" that the U.S. economy will get a boost from President-Elect Donald Trump's proposed tax cuts.
Ford maintained its customary lead in pickup truck sales with November, though GMC Sierra sales jumped more than 14%.
Sales of the Ford F-Series pickups rose more than 10% in November and accounted for more than 36% of total sales for the month.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations seen on Thursday morning include Alcoa, Deere, Ford, GM, McDonald's, Wells Fargo, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto.
Automakers are set to release their U.S. sales data for November, and it's impossible to find an analyst who doesn't think that reported sales will set an all-time record for the month.