As Expected, Ford's Profit Fell Sharply on Restructuring Charges

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Ford Motor (NYSE: F) reported second-quarter net income of $148 million, down sharply from $1.1 billion in the second quarter of 2018. As expected, one-time charges related to Ford's restructuring efforts in Europe and South America were responsible for much of the decline.

Excluding those one-time items, Ford earned $0.28 per share, up $0.01 from the year-ago period. Revenue from Ford's core automotive business was $35.76 billion, down from $35.9 billion a year ago. Wall Street analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected adjusted earnings per share and automotive revenue of $0.31 and $35.17 billion.

Ford's share price fell sharply in after-hours trading after the news was released.

Ford's world headquarters building in Dearborn, Michigan, USA.
Ford's world headquarters building in Dearborn, Michigan, USA.

The raw numbers

Here are the key numbers from Ford's second-quarter 2019 results.

Metric

Q2 2019

Change vs. Q2 2018

Revenue

$38.9 billion

0%

Wholesale shipments (rounded to the nearest thousand)

1,364,000

(9%)

Adjusted EBIT

$1.7 billion

0%

Automotive EBIT margin

3.8%

0.6 ppts higher

Net income

$150 million

(86%)

Adjusted earnings per share

$0.28

$0.01 higher

Adjusted free cash flow

$0.2 billion

$2.0 billion higher

Data source: Ford Motor Company. "EBIT" is earnings before interest and tax. "Adjusted" figures exclude the effects of one-time items. Ford took $1.2 billion in one-time charges in the second quarter of 2019 and $42 million in one-time charges in the second quarter of 2018. "Automotive" figures include results from Ford's core automaking business; results from its financial-services unit are excluded. "Ppts" = percentage points.

Ford's quarter in a nutshell

The good news is that Ford's ongoing global "redesign" effort is showing tangible signs of progress. Net pricing improved in all of Ford's regional business units, meaning that Ford is able to get more money for its vehicles, on average, than it could a year ago. In some cases, the difference was significant -- pricing improvements helped Ford Europe to a small profit versus a loss in the year-ago period.

That said, Ford had warned investors that this would be a year of big restructuring charges, and it wasn't kidding: Ford took $1.2 billion in restructuring charges in the second quarter, most related to its ongoing efforts in Europe and South America. About $200 million of that was cash; the remainder consisted of non-cash accounting charges, CFO Tim Stone said.

How Ford's business units performed

Note that all financial results in this section are reported on an EBIT basis, except as noted.

North America: Ford earned $1.7 billion in its core North America region, down $57 million from a year ago. Strong vehicle mix and pricing gains helped, but a 7% drop in wholesales -- much of it resulting from tight supplies of the Explorer SUV as its factory was shut down to transition to the all-new 2020 model -- hurt.