Can Ford keep its head above water? - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Can Ford keep its head above water?

Posted May 29 2009, 09:34 AM by Douglas McIntyre
Rating:
Filed under: , ,

Chrysler is well on its way through the Chapter 11 process. The media has pointed out that even if everything goes as planned, Chrysler has a line of vehicles that desperately needs a facelift. The company will also have to deal with the time difference between where the workers are in Detroit and where the bosses are in Italy.

General Motors (GM) has lined up most of the support it needs to enter Chapter 11. With the US government as its primary owner and nearly endless access to capital, it is hard to imagine how anything could go wrong. It is a bad sign that GM’s market share in most of the places where it operates around the world fell in the first quarter. The US was no exception. The No.1 US car company may have to deal with a domestic vehicle market that will only support sales of 10 million units a year and a market share that is below 20% and falling.

One of Ford’s (F) largest suppliers, Visteon, will also make a trip to bankruptcy court. Ford it giving Visteon debtor-in-possession financing. Visteon was a part of Ford until it was spun out in 2000.

Despite that grim backdrop, the No. 2 US car company insists it has the cash to both bail out Visteon and keep its own head above water even with ongoing losses.  But Ford admits that trouble with its suppliers could become increasingly expensive. In its last 10-Q the company wrote “it is reasonably possible that our costs to ensure an uninterrupted supply of materials and components could be higher than our present planning assumptions by a material amount.”

With all of the news coverage that GM and Chrysler are getting it is hard to remember that Ford lost $2.3 billion in the first quarter of the year and only had $24.8 billion on its balance sheet. A conversion of convertible notes has improved Ford’s finances since March 31. Revenue for that period was down to $21.4 billion from $39.1 billion in the same period a year ago.

Ford faces two problems, and it is possible that it will not be able to solve either of them. The firm’s US market share in the first quarter was only 13.9%. That is down from 15% in the first quarter of 2008. Ford cannot afford for that figure to go any lower. The large Japanese and Korean manufacturers will use their balance sheets to make certain that product development and efficient operations give them an ongoing edge in costs and quality.

Ford also faces competition which it might well deem as unfair from GM and Chrysler. They will be free of many of their costs after bankruptcies and government assistance. The Administration will be tempted to throw good money after bad if its two wards do not meet their projections. Ford will not have access to that kind of funding if it stays with its pledge to keep its hands out of the government’s pockets.

Ford cannot avoid the fact that the auto parts industry is in as much or more trouble than the large manufacturers. That is not news to anyone who reads the papers, but the trouble is becoming more acute each month that the auto market does not improve and with every call from the car companies asking for more price concessions. A breakdown of the auto supply chain will hurt every car company in America, but Ford may not have access to capital to ride out a long interruption.

Ford has been hailed a bit of a miracle company, the one US manufacturer that has been able to stand on its own. It took the risk of refinancing its balance sheet two years ago when the action was not popular. The gamble paid off. Now Ford has to do something that it may not be capable of doing. It has to increase its piece of the US car market during a period when some of its suppliers cannot ship parts.

Top Stocks blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

Related stories:

Oil's big run

Forget Dell

Japan sinking

Comments

 

It's not that American car companies make bad cars.  It's that nobody is buying ANYTHING right now.

The Government is destroying the economy so Americans should buy Ford products.  Go Ford.  But American.  Avoid buying Government Motors.

Ford, do not take government money at all costs!!  If necessary,  go into bankrupcy on your own terms and come out with all costs in line to be super competitive. The Chrysler and GM bankrupcies are a farce.  The will come out of them with non competitive costs and being owned by the union and government that destoyed them in the first place.

I would like the media to spend more time praising Ford for not going the easy way. I am proud to be a multi-car owner of Ford products and will continue to support them through sales and using the dealer for routine maintenance. Perhaps if more attention was spent on the one car company actually doing business without having their hand out for government assistance, more people would feel better and continue to support Ford. Let's not let the media run our lives. Let's make our own decisions. Let's support the American car company doing the best. FORD. We need to keep their employees working.

I've been looking for a Ford Fusion Hybrid for a while now and can't find one to test.  The local dealers tell me they can't get them and some dealers at other locations are slapping a premium on the MSLP.  Not a great way for Ford to recapture any domestic market.  By all accounts, the Fusion Hybrid is quite a car.

Just to clarify this report, FORD market share in the first quarter was 14.6%, and by the end of April was 16.3% (above the 15.4% of Toyota).

The writer seems to be biased or paid by the Japanese / Korean companies to discredit Ford efforts to turn around and become number one is market share in US.

It's time to support free market and support US. Buy Ford, don't buy foreign nor Government Motors.

Go Ford(!)... as Huxley would say: "In the sign of the T".

And good luck to those who are Government Motors(GM)employees and/or customers.

I love Ford!  Keep the faith!  You are really special not caving to the Feds!

Ford -  It's a ' BUY '  !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The new American business slogan....'When the going gets tough, file bankruptcy.' Until our enabling (non)government and restoration for true American pride and progress is restored, we can expect more of the same even after this economy turns. Too many American companies(and people) no longer take pride in stability and longevity. I love this country but I can no longer support what has been happening.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):