Ford’s stock price currently sits at a valuation reflecting roughly 10.1x earnings and a market cap of approximately $47.6 billion.
Ford Motor Company, F
Ford Motor (F) is a stock that looks cheap on paper. Whether that cheapness is an opportunity or a warning label depends entirely on which part of the business you’re looking at.
The headline numbers from 2025 tell a split story. Revenue hit a record $187.3 billion — impressive scale for any company. But a net loss of $8.2 billion sitting right next to that figure is hard to ignore. Adjusted EBIT came in at $6.8 billion for the year.
The balance sheet provides some cushion. Ford closed 2025 with nearly $29 billion in cash and around $50 billion in total liquidity. That gives management room to keep investing without immediately rattling the debt markets.
The commercial division, Ford Pro, is the clearest reason bulls still have a case here. In 2025 it produced $66.3 billion in revenue and $6.84 billion in EBIT, with margins comfortably above 10%.
Paid software subscriptions inside Ford Pro climbed 30% in 2025. That matters because software and services revenue is stickier and more profitable than selling a truck outright.
Ford Pro is not just a fleet sales business anymore. It has built a recurring revenue ecosystem around telematics, maintenance, fleet management, and services — something few traditional automakers can point to at comparable scale.
Then there’s Model e. Ford’s EV division brought in $6.7 billion in revenue in 2025 but burned through $4.81 billion in EBIT losses. The 2026 outlook calls for losses in the same segment to run between $4.0 billion and $4.5 billion.
That is not a rounding error. Investors are being asked to absorb a multibillion-dollar drag while waiting for Ford’s next-generation affordable EV platform to arrive.
The patience required is not nothing.
On the demand side, things got harder in early 2026. Reuters reported that Ford’s U.S. sales fell nearly 9% in Q1 2026. Truck sales were down 11.3%. SUV sales dropped 7.8%. EV sales fell almost 70%, hit by affordability pressures, high financing costs, and the expiry of federal EV tax credits.
Ford’s 2026 guidance targets $8.0–$10.0 billion in adjusted EBIT and $5.0–$6.0 billion in adjusted free cash flow. But that guidance was set in February, before the Q1 sales data landed. Whether those targets hold as the demand environment softens is the key question for the rest of the year.
For long-term investors, Ford is the kind of stock that requires conviction in the fundamentals rather than momentum. The valuation is undemanding. The commercial business is genuinely strong. Free cash flow targets, if met, support the dividend case.
The risk is that EV losses stay elevated longer than expected, Ford Blue margins come under pressure from weak volume, and the stock simply drifts without a clear catalyst. Ford Pro is doing its job. The rest of the company still needs to catch up.
Ford’s most recent data point — a near-9% drop in Q1 U.S. sales — is the number investors will be watching most closely as 2026 progresses.
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