DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Ford CEO Jim Farley knew the EV pain would be bad but the ‘punch line’ is a $4.8 billion loss: ‘the customer has spoken’

February 12, 2026
in News
Ford CEO Jim Farley knew the EV pain would be bad but the ‘punch line’ is a $4.8 billion loss: ‘the customer has spoken’

For months, Ford Motor Company CEO Jim Farley warned anyone who would listen that the electric vehicle transition was about to hit a wall, starting in September, when he predicted that the expiration of federal tax credits would cut the EV market in half. He said EVs would remain a “vibrant industry” but predicted they were “going to be smaller, way smaller than we thought.”

The turning point was what Farley called a “game-changer”: the end of the $7,500 consumer incentive from the federal government, something that Farley saw cutting EV sales in the U.S. down to 5% of the industry from the current level of roughly 10% to 12%. (JD Power estimated that EVs were 6.6% of new retail sales in January, suggesting the total picture is very close to what Farley predicted.)

On Tuesday, during Ford’s fourth-quarter earnings call, Farley presented the Detroit legacy manufacturer’s confirmation of his predictions: a $4.8 billion operating loss for the Model E electric vehicle unit. CFO Sherry House confirmed that the bleeding won’t stop there. The company expects the unit to lose another $4 billion to $4.5 billion in 2026, with the break-even target pushed back to 2029.

“The customer has spoken. That’s the punch line,” Farley told investors, validating his own grim forecasts with a balance sheet that shows the high cost of a market correction he saw coming. In a sign that Farley prepared the market well for this moment, Ford stock is up more than 27% over the last six months.

Prophecy fulfilled

In response to what he calls the “duty cycle” of the consumer, a shorthand for how, where, and for what purpose a vehicle is used that Farley has been using for years, he declared an end on Tuesday to the era of building EVs solely to meet regulatory targets. “We aren’t just building compliance vehicles at Ford,” Farley said.

Instead, the automaker is pivoting to a “high volume, affordable end of the market,” specifically targeting the $30,000 to $35,000 price range where Farley notes EVs “have continued to thrive in America” without subsidies. This strategy stands in sharp contrast to the industry’s previous rush toward $75,000 electric trucks and SUVs—products that Farley had previously noted customers found “interesting” but too expensive.

The pivot, however, comes with a hefty price tag. Ford expects to record approximately $7 billion in special charges over 2026 and 2027 related to scrapping its old EV strategy and disposing of assets that no longer fit the new roadmap. In December 2025, Farley announced a $19.5 billion writedown amid the company’s pivot on EVs.

JD Power found in January that “affordability pressure remains significant” in the car sales space, with the average monthly finance payment reaching $760, up $24 from a year ago. “EV retail sales remain depressed as transaction prices jump through a combination of the elimination of federal credits and reduced incentives from manufacturers.”

Old habits pay the bills

While the EV division undergoes this painful restructuring, Ford is leaning on its traditional strengths to stay profitable. The company’s commercial division, Ford Pro, delivered $6.8 billion in EBIT for the year, effectively subsidizing the electric losses.

Farley also highlighted the growing consumer preference for “partial electrification,” a trend he spotted early, noting that Americans were “falling in love with” hybrids rather than pure EVs. On the call, he reported that Ford’s off-road performance trims and hybrids now account for more than 20% of the U.S. sales mix, providing “massive earning power” to fund the company’s future.

A “reset” environment

The earnings call also highlighted the volatility of the current political landscape, which Farley has previously navigated with calls for consistency. He acknowledged a “partnership with the administration” and a “reset in the emission standards” as key factors for 2026. However, trade barriers remain a wild card; the company took an unexpected $1 billion hit in the fourth quarter due to an “unexpected and late-year change in tariff credits for auto parts,” further complicating the financial picture.

For Farley, the 2025 results are a vindication of his caution. The initial EV gold rush is over, replaced by a smaller, tougher market that demands affordability over idealism. As he concluded on the call, “The customers in their duty cycle have spoken.

The post Ford CEO Jim Farley knew the EV pain would be bad but the ‘punch line’ is a $4.8 billion loss: ‘the customer has spoken’ appeared first on Fortune.

AI Is a Burnout Machine
News

AI Is a Burnout Machine

by Futurism
February 12, 2026

Some software engineers are finding that AI is speeding up their work, but at a cost: it’s also accelerating them ...

Read more
News

Using a law deployed against mob bosses, D.C. files suit against a landlord

February 12, 2026
News

Government fraud is everywhere. Prediction markets can root it out.

February 12, 2026
News

Scientists think an $80M wall around ‘Doomsday Glacier’ will slow sea level rise

February 12, 2026
News

Colorectal Cancer Has Become More Common Among Younger People

February 12, 2026
Judge Temporarily Blocks Hegseth from Punishing Kelly for Video

Judge Temporarily Blocks Hegseth from Punishing Kelly for Video

February 12, 2026
The CEO of Google DeepMind juggles another job as the founder of a multibillion-dollar startup by starting a second work day at 10 p.m.

The CEO of Google DeepMind juggles another job as the founder of a multibillion-dollar startup by starting a second work day at 10 p.m.

February 12, 2026
The 43 best things to do in D.C. this weekend and next week

The 43 best things to do in D.C. this weekend and next week

February 12, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026