Bring back the Model A?
The Board of Directors of Ford Motor Company declared a fourth quarter regular dividend of $0.15 per share on the company’s outstanding Class B and common stock. The fourth quarter dividend is the same amount of regular dividend paid in the first, second and third quarters of 2018. (See AutoInformed.com on Ford Motor US Sales Reverse in September. Job Cuts Coming)
The fourth quarter dividend is payable on December 3, 2018 to shareholders of record at the close of business on October 23, 2018. The latest Ford news comes as the company struggles in a good economy. Ford Motor Company’s September U.S. sales declined cheap xenical -11.2% on total sales of 197,404 vehicles (-2% year-to-date).
The only semi-bright spot is that Ford brand SUV sales are running at a record pace this year through September. Expedition turned in a 27.4% gain on record transaction prices of $63,600 as customers opted for more high series Platinum SUVs. Ford and Lincoln cars were an unmitigated disaster – at 37,112 in September (-26.5% y-o-y), and 357,278 for 9 months, or -16.6%.
However, September 2018 was a tough month for comparison because of strong performance a year ago in 2017 resulting from pent-up and replacement demand following Hurricane Harvey in Houston. Although September 2018 also had some weather-related impact due to Hurricane Florence. It’s the year-to-date and quarterly results that are troubling.
When you peer through the p.r. flak, Ford Motor Company’s September U.S. sales declined -11.2% on total sales of 197,404 vehicles (-2% year-to-date). The only semi-bright spot is that Ford brand SUV sales are running at a record pace this year through September. Expedition turned in a 27.4% gain on record transaction prices of $63,600 as customers opted for more high series Platinum SUVs.
Ford and Lincoln cars were a total disaster – at 37,112 in September (-26.5% y-o-y), and 357,278 for 9 months, or -16.6%. No wonder that Ford is preparing to cut white collar jobs but it won’t say how many or when.
While the F-Series exceeded the 70,000-truck mark for the seventh straight month, selling 75,092 pickups in September, year-to-date the F-Series was down -8.8% in September and up 3% year-over year to date. Still, transaction pricing is running at record levels of $46,600 per truck, up $1,000 over a year ago. Super Duty transaction pricing totaled a record $59,100 per truck in September. How long can this last?
Dead-Brand Lincoln was at a funeral pace with September sales down -7.2% at 8,168. Year-to-date is not much better at 75,280 or -9%. The flacks claim the all-new Lincoln Navigator “remains white hot,” with overall sales up 77.3%. Ahem, that’s 1,257 crossovers out of a total of 1,886 total Lincoln sales in September. While Lincoln’s luxury SUV is maintaining a rich mix of high series vehicles – normal on a new model of a pricey vehicle – this is an expensive hobby, not a business.
Ford Motor Company Q4 Dividend Remains $0.15
Bring back the Model A?
The Board of Directors of Ford Motor Company declared a fourth quarter regular dividend of $0.15 per share on the company’s outstanding Class B and common stock. The fourth quarter dividend is the same amount of regular dividend paid in the first, second and third quarters of 2018. (See AutoInformed.com on Ford Motor US Sales Reverse in September. Job Cuts Coming)
The fourth quarter dividend is payable on December 3, 2018 to shareholders of record at the close of business on October 23, 2018. The latest Ford news comes as the company struggles in a good economy. Ford Motor Company’s September U.S. sales declined cheap xenical -11.2% on total sales of 197,404 vehicles (-2% year-to-date).
The only semi-bright spot is that Ford brand SUV sales are running at a record pace this year through September. Expedition turned in a 27.4% gain on record transaction prices of $63,600 as customers opted for more high series Platinum SUVs. Ford and Lincoln cars were an unmitigated disaster – at 37,112 in September (-26.5% y-o-y), and 357,278 for 9 months, or -16.6%.
However, September 2018 was a tough month for comparison because of strong performance a year ago in 2017 resulting from pent-up and replacement demand following Hurricane Harvey in Houston. Although September 2018 also had some weather-related impact due to Hurricane Florence. It’s the year-to-date and quarterly results that are troubling.
When you peer through the p.r. flak, Ford Motor Company’s September U.S. sales declined -11.2% on total sales of 197,404 vehicles (-2% year-to-date). The only semi-bright spot is that Ford brand SUV sales are running at a record pace this year through September. Expedition turned in a 27.4% gain on record transaction prices of $63,600 as customers opted for more high series Platinum SUVs.
Ford and Lincoln cars were a total disaster – at 37,112 in September (-26.5% y-o-y), and 357,278 for 9 months, or -16.6%. No wonder that Ford is preparing to cut white collar jobs but it won’t say how many or when.
While the F-Series exceeded the 70,000-truck mark for the seventh straight month, selling 75,092 pickups in September, year-to-date the F-Series was down -8.8% in September and up 3% year-over year to date. Still, transaction pricing is running at record levels of $46,600 per truck, up $1,000 over a year ago. Super Duty transaction pricing totaled a record $59,100 per truck in September. How long can this last?
Dead-Brand Lincoln was at a funeral pace with September sales down -7.2% at 8,168. Year-to-date is not much better at 75,280 or -9%. The flacks claim the all-new Lincoln Navigator “remains white hot,” with overall sales up 77.3%. Ahem, that’s 1,257 crossovers out of a total of 1,886 total Lincoln sales in September. While Lincoln’s luxury SUV is maintaining a rich mix of high series vehicles – normal on a new model of a pricey vehicle – this is an expensive hobby, not a business.