Ford Motor Company

NYSE: F
$11.01
-$0.06 (-0.5%)
Closing Price on November 15, 2024

F Articles

February auto sales have been strong and could reach the highest ever for the month, according to Kelley Blue Book.
At the end of 2014, the average age of light vehicle (cars and pickups) on U.S. roads reached 11.5 years, the highest ever. By the end of this year, the average is expected to rise to 11.6 years, and...
The most shorted stock traded on the New York Stock Exchange — Chesapeake Energy — bucked the short interest trend with a modest gain in February.
Credit Suisse issued calls on Ford, General Motors and Delphi Automotive on Wednesday, citing that auto volumes have reached a peak in the United States.
Lincoln may not sell many cars, but its image got a boost from the results of a new J.D. Power survey.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations seen on Wednesday, February 24, include First Solar, Ford, Frontier Communications, JPMorgan, Macy's and Yamana Gold.
The Lincoln MKX is supposed to be a foundation of the Ford luxury division's turnaround. So far, the plan has worked.
New vehicle registrations in the European Union rose in January, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers Association (ACEA), led by Germany and the United Kingdom.
The air pollution problems in the world's two most populous nations may take a chunk out of global car sales.
Among the six most heavily shorted stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange, short sellers continued to pile on Alcoa and Freeport-McMoRan between the January 15 and January 29 settlement dates.
U.S. new car sales in 2015 rose to a record total of some 17.5 million units sold. Especially popular among U.S. car buyers were small SUVs and, as usual, pickup trucks.
Things don’t look too good for Tesla Motors Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) as new 52-week lows are setting in below the $170 threshold. This comes on the heels of some embarrassing public relations gaffes for...
Sales of troubled luxury car brands Lincoln and Cadillac moved different directions in January.
A drop of 40% in Ford F-Series pickups is due in large part to the snowy weather that hit the East Coast late last month.
Ford on Tuesday reported a U.S. sales decrease of 3% year over year in January to 173,723 Ford and Lincoln vehicles.