Ford Motor Company

NYSE: F
$10.43
-$0.44 (-4.0%)
Real Time Data Delayed 15 Min.

F Articles

Ford's sales in October are expected to fall enough so that it will lose the number two spot in the U.S. market to Toyota.
Ford reported better-than-expected third-quarter 2016 results before markets opened Thursday morning.
After two periods of wildly surging short interest in Procter & Gamble, short sellers had enough and fled the stock between the September 30 and October 14 settlement dates.
Consumer Reports magazine on Monday released its reliability rankings for 2017, and once again Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM) snagged the top two spots in the league table with its Lexus brand once...
Automakers will be reporting new car sales for the month of October next Tuesday, November 1, and initial sales estimates are beginning to roll in.
24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of Twitter, Ford and some of the major companies reporting their quarterly results this week.
The past month or so has been the best time in eight years to buy a pickup — and it looks as if the time is getting even better.
Of the top 100 product categories and brands in a new ranking of customer loyalty leaders, more than a third are involved in digital technology and social networking.
Ford may believe it has a bright future, but no one can tell if its new initiatives will work. Wall Street does not believe Ford's executives run the company well.
While sales of the Ford F-Series are up more than 5% in the first nine months of 2016, September sales were down more than 2% year over year for the country's best-selling vehicle.
New car registrations in the European Union for the month of September totaled 1.46 million units, a volume record for the month.
Toyota vies with Volkswagen for the world crown in car companies by unit sales, yet the Japanese manufacturer has the world's most valuable car brand.
The short interest data shows a massive surge in the number of Procter & Gamble shares sold short -- more than 250%! The swings in the other most shorted NYSE stocks were mixed but mild.
Fiat Chrysler on Monday night reached an 11th-hour agreement with its Canadian labor union that dodged a strike set to begin at midnight.
Toyota claims more than two-thirds of the U.S. market for hybrid car sales. Not exactly a surprise because the company's Prius was the first mass-produced hybrid car on the market.