Ford Motor Co. (F) stock closed down 4.97% on Monday, landing at $13.39. Pre-market Tuesday saw further losses, dropping another 1.79% to $13.15.
Ford Motor Company, F
The decline tracks a broader sell-off across Detroit automakers. General Motors (NYSE: GM) fell 1.21% Monday to $77.76, and Stellantis (NYSE: STLA) dropped 5.69% to $7.63.
Oil prices are climbing as tensions between the U.S. and Iran escalate, creating headwinds across the auto sector.
Stellantis continued to feel the heaviest pressure, falling a further 5.64% in pre-market Tuesday. GM was down 1.81% in the same session.
Despite the stock pressure, Ford’s recent quarterly earnings told a different story.
Ford reported Q4 EPS of $0.13, more than doubling the consensus estimate of $0.06. Revenue came in at $45.89 billion, beating the $41.78 billion estimate.
The beat wasn’t clean, though. Revenue was down 4.8% year-over-year, and the company posted a net margin of -4.37%.
Ford’s PE ratio currently sits at -6.50, reflecting that negative margin. The company’s 50-day moving average is $13.74, and its 200-day moving average is $13.90.
The one-year range runs from a low of $8.44 to a high of $14.80, giving some context to where the stock is trading now.
Seventeen analysts currently cover Ford. The breakdown: two sells, eleven holds, three buys, and one strong buy.
The average 12-month price target sits at $13.02 — roughly in line with current trading levels.
Some firms have been moving their targets higher. JPMorgan raised its target to $15.00 with an “overweight” rating in January. Piper Sandler upgraded Ford to “overweight” and lifted its target to $16.00 in early January. UBS moved its target to $15.00, though maintained a “neutral” stance.
Analysts forecast Ford will post $1.47 EPS for the full year.
William Clay Ford Jr. made a move in February, buying 140,000 shares at an average price of $13.82 per share — a total outlay of roughly $1.93 million.
The purchase increased his position by 3.71%, bringing his total holding to 3,912,600 shares.
Ford paid a quarterly dividend of $0.15 per share on March 2nd to shareholders of record as of February 13th. On an annualized basis, that’s $0.60 per share, representing a yield of around 4.5%.
Institutional investors hold 58.74% of Ford stock. Several smaller firms added modestly to their positions in Q4, including Robertson Stephens Wealth Management and CRA Financial Services.
Ford has maintained its commitment to EV development through its Universal EV Platform, even as broader industry momentum on EVs has shifted under the current administration.
Ford’s debt-to-equity ratio stands at 2.95, with a current ratio of 1.07 and a quick ratio of 0.94.
The post Ford (F) Stock Drops 5% — Is the Sell-Off an Opportunity or a Warning? appeared first on CoinCentral.


