Ford warns of $2.5B hit from Trump tariffs, suspends annual earnings forecast

Ford Motor suspended its annual guidance on Monday because of uncertainty around President Trump’s tariffs, saying the levies would cost the company about $1.5 billion in adjusted earnings before interest and taxes.In February, the Dearborn, Mich.automaker projected earnings before interest and taxes of $7.0 billion to $8.5 billion for 2025.

That forecast did not take tariffs into account.Ford Chief Financial Officer Sherry House said the company was on track to meet that guidance, excluding the fallout from tariffs.“We are focused on managing what we control,” House said.While rivals such as General Motors recently provided updated guidance, Ford executives said they suspended the company’s outlook until they have more clarity about the effect of retaliatory tariffs, as well as how consumers may react to price increases.Ford’s earnings per share fell to 14 cents in the first quarter, far surpassing LSEG analysts’ estimate of 2 cents per share but down from 49 cents a year earlier.Cost and quality improvements helped Ford beat expectations, executives said.Earlier this year, the automaker had warned that first-quarter results would be affected by production disruptions related to product launches at several plants.

Net income fell sharply to $471 million from $1.3 billion a year earlier.Ford’s revenue fell 5% to $40.7 billion in the quarter but beat expectations of about $36 billion.Earnings got a boost as consumers rushed to snatch up vehicles, concerned tariffs would lead to price hikes.

Ford was one of a few automakers that ran incentives to grab market share during this buying frenzy.Ford said tariffs would add $2.5 billion in costs overall for the year, mainly related to expenses from importing vehicles from Mexico and China.The automaker suspended automotive exports to China, but still imports vehicles like its Lincoln Nautilus from the country.Ford said it has been able to reduce about $1 billion of that cost through various actions...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles