Ford may narrow loss after winning more US market
Ford Motor Co. may narrow its third-quarter operating loss after winning more U.S. market share on the strength of a reputation enhanced by avoiding bankruptcy.
Ford will post an adjusted loss Nov. 2 of 22 cents a share, down from a year-earlier loss of $1.31, or $2.98 billion, based on the average of 11 analysts' estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would be a $632 million loss, according to 6 estimates.
Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally, who kept Ford out of Chapter 11 as General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC reorganized, is trying to extend his sales momentum with new models such as the Focus and Fiesta small cars due in 2010. He projects reaching break-even or an operating profit by 2011.
"Next year is all about delivering the goods," said Bernie McGinn, president of McGinn Investment Management of Alexandria, Virginia, which owns about 320,000 Ford shares. "Ford will be rewarded for its performance in the darkest days, and I think the other guys will be penalized."
The Dearborn, Michigan-based automaker accounted for 13.1 percent of third-quarter U.S. auto sales to retail buyers, up from 11 percent a year earlier, Ken Czubay, Ford's U.S. sales chief, said in an interview. Total market share, including fleet purchases, was 15.8 percent through September.
"Reputations are not built or lost over the course of six months," Jim Farley, Ford's group vice president of marketing, said in an interview. "The burden is on us to explain to the customer the difference in our products and not just our management of the company."
'A Bit Cautious'
Ford may struggle to hold ground gained while GM and Chrysler were hobbled by Chapter 11, said Brian Johnson, a Barclays Capital analyst in Chicago who raised his rating on the shares to "equal weight" from "underweight" on Oct. 20.
"We're a bit cautious about extrapolating out Ford's summer market share," Johnson said. "We're looking more closely at the next quarter, with GM and Chrysler out of bankruptcy."
Staying out of court has helped Ford post smaller 2009 sales declines than GM and Chrysler. U.S. deliveries through September fell 22 percent, less than the industry's 27 percent slide and drops of 36 percent for GM and 40 percent for Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler, according to researcher Autodata Corp. of Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey.
Stronger demand allowed Ford to raise prices and trim incentives, with spending on those discounts pared by $300 a vehicle last quarter, Johnson said.
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