cars

GM, Ford grapple with current challenges while making future promises


Though GM and Ford were once giants of the global auto sector, their market capitalizations have been dwarfed by Tesla. On Wednesday Tesla reported stronger-than-expected revenue and profit for the fourth quarter of 2021, but warned that supply-chain bottlenecks would continue through 2022 and likely prevent its factories from running at full capacity.

GM last year sold fewer vehicles in the U.S. than Toyota Motor Corp. — the first time in 91 years that GM was not the No. 1-selling automaker in its home market.

GM and Ford’s profits in 2021 were lifted by consumers willing to pay record-high prices for petroleum-powered pickup trucks and SUVs. In 2022, analysts are concerned the Detroit manufacturers will face a more uncertain economic environment, including rising interest rates, high oil prices and continuing supply-chain bottlenecks that could curtail production.

Analysts expect both companies to be cautious in their outlooks for 2022. Shortages of semiconductors are expected to weigh on production into the second half of the year, Bank of America wrote in a note.

“While automakers will enjoy production recovery and inventory restocking, (those) could be coupled with price declines, mix deterioration, rising input costs,” Morgan Stanley said.

Ford told investors in its third-quarter report that it expected $1.5 billion in higher commodity costs, and saw inflationary pressures across a broad range of expenses.

Wall Street has shown more confidence over the last several months in efforts by Ford’s CEO, Jim Farley, to accelerate the company’s electric pickup truck and van programs. Ford’s market value hit $100 billion in mid-January, exceeding GM’s value for the first time in more than five years. But the market value of Ford, whose quarterly results are expected on Thursday afternoon, has since dropped by 20 percent after the company issued a complicated reworking of its 2021 profit guidance.

GM CEO Mary Barra is expected to have a more straightforward story to tell on Tuesday about fourth-quarter and full-year results. GM CFO Paul Jacobson told investors in December the company expected adjusted pretax profit for 2021 to reach $14 billion, higher than previous forecasts.



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