Ford Motor Q3 2021 Earnings Report $0.20 0.00 (0.00%) As of 04/8/2025 Earnings HistoryForecast MDWerks EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.51Consensus EPS $0.27Beat/MissBeat by +$0.24One Year Ago EPS$0.65MDWerks Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$33.21 billionExpected Revenue$32.79 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$417.12 millionYoY Revenue Growth-4.30%MDWerks Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2021Date10/26/2021TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, October 26, 2021Conference Call Time8:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsMeta Platforms' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, April 30, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryMETA ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Meta Platforms Q3 2021 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 26, 2021 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, my name is Erica, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome you to the Ford Motor Company Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Lynn Antipas Tyson, Executive Director of Investor Relations. Speaker 100:00:35Thank you, Erica. Welcome to Ford Motor Company's Q3 2021 earnings call. With me today are Jim Farley, our President and CEO and John Waller, our Chief Financial Officer. Also joining us for Q and A is Marion Harris, CEO of Ford Credit. Today's discussions include some non GAAP references. Speaker 100:00:53These are reconciled to the most comparable U. S. GAAP measures in the appendix of our earnings deck. You You can find the deck along with the rest of our earnings materials and other important content at shareholder. Ford.com, including some updated videos and proof points around our Ford Plus plan for growth. Speaker 100:01:10Today's discussion also includes forward looking statements about our expectations. Speaker 200:01:15To the operator. Speaker 100:01:15Actual results may differ from those stated. The most significant factors that could cause actual results to differ are included on Page 23. Unless otherwise noted, all comparisons are year over year. Company EBIT, EPS and free cash flow are on an adjusted basis. Product mix is volume weighted. Speaker 100:01:31To a quick update on our IR events for the balance of the year. We have 5. On Monday, 1st November 1st, Wolf will host a fireside chat with to John Waller and Hao Tai Tang, our Chief Product Platform and Operations Officer. On the 18th November, Barclays will host a virtual fireside chat to Ted Canis, our CEO of Ford Pro. In December, on 3rd, Goldman Sachs will host a virtual fireside chat with Lisa Drake, our Chief Operating Officer for North America. Speaker 100:01:59On the 3rd Credit Suisse, we'll host fireside chat with Haotai Tang. And finally, on 9th, Deutsche Bank will host a virtual fireside chat with to Alex Purdy, our Director of Business Operations, Enterprise Connectivity. Now I'll turn the call over to Jim Farley. Speaker 300:02:13Thank you, Lynn. Hello, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Well, this month marks 1 year since we began executing our Ford Plus plan. It creates growth, value and it allows us to win in the emerging area of electric and connected vehicles. We built a strong team that combines top leaders from Ford with world class talent recruited from outside of our company, to specific talent, specific people that are largely outside of our industry. Speaker 300:02:50This leadership team is committed to this plan And we're accelerating our progress. Afford Plus is not a tagline. It's not advertising. It's a larger, more ambitious way to think about our business and how we bring value to our customers. We're creating iconic and distinctive products that only Ford can do, increasingly always on relationships with our customers to an ever improving user experiences, all while creating value for our shareholders. Speaker 300:03:24We're fully vested in this future and we're taking big swings. Key to the plan is harnessing the power of connectivity. We're designing a new generation of fully networked vehicles, not delegated to our supply chain, but done inside the company to revolutionize the experience of owning and operating Ford vehicle. That's embedded technology to unleash unlimited innovation. We're scaling the number of vehicles capable of over their updates. Speaker 300:03:54We'll be moving from 1,000,000 vehicles today to 33,000,000 by 2028. To Dott's scale. At the same time, we're moving aggressively to lead the electric vehicle revolution, substantially expanding our battery production as we speak today in the U. S. In fact, to the operator. Speaker 300:04:15We already announced plans that will give us enough battery production to meet our mid decade goal of 141 Gigawatts, Which is enough to build more than 1,000,000 battery electric vehicles a year, and I think we'll need more. Our $7,000,000,000 investment in Blue Oval City in Tennessee and the Blue Oval SK Battery Park in Kentucky sets a new standard for scale, to Sustainability, Advanced Manufacturing and Training the Next Generation of Technology Leaders. At the same time, to the $1,000,000,000 of investment in our electrified center in Cologne, Germany will allow us to go all electric soon. That center will be all electric by 2023. We're making final preparations to launch the F-one hundred and fifty Lightning. Speaker 300:05:07To the defining zero emission version of America's best selling vehicle for the past 40 plus years. To our all electric Mustang Mach E is a hit with customers not just in the U. S. But around the world, Bringing a stunning number of new customers to the Ford brand. Over 90% of the Mach E owners say they would recommend to Ama key to other customers, critical as a new generation of battery electric customers make new brand choices. Speaker 300:05:41Our challenge now is to break production constraints and increase availability to meet this incredible demand, both in North America and in Europe and also in China, the biggest EV market in the world, where we are just starting production of Mach E. We believe the global demand just for Mustang Mach E could approach about 200,000 vehicles a year. To We've created a new organization, Ford Pro, to change and power the future of work with compelling commercial vehicles, distribution and services, while growing revenues to Ford. To in a few weeks, we will start production of the new E Transit, an electric version of the world's best selling commercial van. To the Q3 alone, Ford Live, Europe's new connected uptime center, which I wish you could all see to our commercial customers, helps customers in the U. Speaker 300:06:44K. Secure additional uptime, preventing about $8,000,000 of lost revenue We're reinventing icons like Bronco and creating new ones like Maverick. In fact, the all new Maverick, 42 miles per gallon, I might add, is the 1st standard hybrid pickup in the United States. It's also America's most fuel efficient hybrid pickup. This is the strongest, most compelling lineup I've ever seen from any mass market brand In my career, and we are creating a spring loaded future as we emerge from the chip shortages and COVID constraints. Speaker 300:07:28We continue to make important strides in the technology and go to market strategy for autonomous vehicles. In the Q2, we told you about a new partnership with Argo AI and Lyft. And in the Q3, we announced a new partnership with Argo AI and Walmart. This is Walmart's first ever multi city autonomous delivery service and it will be anchored in cities where we already have operations. To not the easiest miles in one city, but multiple cities and hard miles. Speaker 300:07:59In addition to making real progress on autonomy vehicles, to operating domains, SDS. We fully support Argo AI's aspiration to access public capital. To build this future and generate the margins and cash flow we need to fund Ford Plus, We had to turn around our automotive operations and improve our competitiveness. Our results in the 3rd quarter Sure, we are making significant progress. In fact, company wide, we achieved an 8.4% EBIT margin, including 10.1% in North America. Speaker 300:08:40Those margins, I'll remind you, are in line with our targets for 2023. To more importantly, our operations outside of North America are likely to post the best performance in 4 years. Please note the performance in South America, largely driven by our success of our global redesign. We've been able to achieve this while thoughtfully managing our supply chain for short term sustainable improvements, including semiconductors and prioritizing high to Demand and High Profit Vehicles. Now before I turn over to John, a few thoughts. Speaker 300:09:20I believe We have the right plan to drive growth and unlock unprecedented value. You are already seeing a favorable change in the slope of our earnings and cash flow. To the operator. Given the strength of our business this year, we are increasing our full year adjusted EBIT guidance to between $10,500,000,000 $11,500,000,000 As we plan in earnest for next year, we're excited and energized about the opportunity in front of us And clear that we have so much more work to do to deliver on Ford's potential. The word I would leave you with is focus. Speaker 300:09:59To the operator. The competitive environment has never been more interesting and tough, and we intend to live up to our promise to compete like a challenger, to focusing on our top priorities to unlock Ford Plus growth with customers at the very center of everything we do. Now I'll turn it over to John, who will take you through our results for the quarter, our outlook for the full year, our capital allocation priorities and our expectations heading into next year. John? Speaker 400:10:28Thank you, Jim. Now in the face of continued industry wide semiconductor constraints, We stayed focused on our plan, strengthening our portfolio and investing in opportunities fundamental to Growth and Value Creation. We delivered a solid quarter with $3,000,000,000 in adjusted company EBIT and a margin of 8.4%. Free cash flow of $7,700,000,000 was, as we expected, up sharply on a sequential basis, driven by the positive working capital effects from higher wholesales and EBIT. We ended the quarter with strong cash and liquidity at over 31,000,000,000 and $47,000,000,000 respectively. Speaker 400:11:12Now across our automotive business, our playbook remains consistent as we optimize production for customer orders, new launches in our most profitable vehicles. And as expected, on a sequential basis, to our shareholders. Our wholesales improved dramatically as chip supply for Ford improved. We also remain disciplined with incentive spending and mix management, which to the Board Credit delivered another solid quarter with $1,100,000,000 in EBT as auction values continue to remain strong and credit losses to continue at near record lows. For the Q4, we're assuming a sequential increase in wholesale. Speaker 400:11:59We also expect continued healthy mix and net pricing and solid results from Ford Credit, although not as strong as the 3rd quarter. Headwinds include inflationary impacts on commodities and freight, and we also expect planned sequential increases in our Ford Plus modernization investments, including customer experience and IT. So let me share with you some highlights from the quarter before I turn to guidance, to capital allocation in our preliminary view of 2022. With improved chip supply, North America wholesales increased sequentially by 67% as the team prioritized launches, customer orders and high margin units, while reducing the number of vehicles built But waiting for chips. Demand remains strong for our exciting vehicles. Speaker 400:12:47The order bank we are building paid off in the 3rd quarter, Representing 28% of our retail sales in the 3rd quarter and reaching a high of 31% in September. And our overall customer orders increased over 50% from the 2nd quarter to more than 100,000 orders excluding Bronco. With a 10.1 percent EBIT margin in the quarter, North America is now at a 9% margin year to date, just 100 basis points shy of our 2023 target of 10%. To South America marked its 8th consecutive quarter of year over year improvement in EBIT and the business run rate is now approaching breakeven. The region also launched its new commercial vehicle organization with the introduction of the new Transit, which is manufactured in Uruguay. Speaker 400:13:42This transit is the 1st light commercial van to market in Brazil that includes connectivity as a standard feature. In Europe, the underlying trajectory of our business continues to strengthen, though the adverse impact from chips has masked this improvement. In the Q3, the business lost about 50,000 units, which would have had a substantial favorable impact on EBIT. Our leadership as the number one commercial vehicle brand continued in the quarter along with an extremely robust order bank. In China, Lincoln continues to perform well, extending its success in the most profitable segment, Luxury. Speaker 400:14:24With retail sales up 24% year over year, in fact, Lincoln has doubled its share of the China luxury market over the past 18 months. Our newly created Bev organization to open its first 13 direct to consumer Ford Select City stores with a total of 25 expected to open by year end. In IMG, our leadership team in India made the difficult decision to end manufacturing following accumulated operating losses of more than $2,000,000,000 over the past 10 years. Going forward, we will focus on importing iconic vehicles, including EVs. Overall, IMG had a solid quarter, capitalizing on our strengths, including Ranger. Speaker 400:15:07Now as Jim highlighted, the underlying strength of our business supports increasing our adjusted EBIT guidance for 2021 to between $10,500,000,000 $11,500,000,000 and that's despite a lower than anticipated improvement in chip availability in the second half of the year. Consistent with our adjusted EBIT guidance through this year, our updated guidance for 2021 includes the $900,000,000 to non cash gain on our investment in Rivian in our Q1 adjusted results. So let me spend a minute on Rivian. Now in the event that Rivian completes its IPO, we will record any gain on our investment and any subsequent adjustments to a special item. Accordingly, we will recast the $900,000,000 non cash gain from adjusted EBIT in the Q1 to a special item. Speaker 400:16:02If Rivian completes their IPO in the Q4, we will make this change when we report our Q4 earnings on February 3, to 2022. Our guidance for 2021 adjusted free cash flow is unchanged at $4,000,000,000 to $5,000,000,000 Reflecting the higher EBIT, but less favorable improvement in working capital and timing difference timing differences. Now this is due to lower than anticipated volume than previously assumed in the back half of the quarter, and that's as a result of chip constraints. We do expect free cash flow to increase with higher production and the associated improvement in supplier payables and other timing differences. Speaker 500:16:45To the operator. Speaker 400:16:45So now let me turn to capital allocation, which again is the foundation of our value creation framework. Our capital allocation discipline is driving a strong to the core business and balance sheet that provides the flexibility to invest in new growth opportunities as we deliver our Ford Plus plan. To the operator. Ultimately, it ensures we return value to our shareholders, both in the form of a higher share price and dividends. Today, we announced the reinstatement of our dividend. Speaker 400:17:15Our Board has approved restarting a regular quarterly dividend of $0.10 per share in the Q4 of 2021. Importantly, the dividend reflects our confidence in the improving run rate of the business and our ability to fund all of our calls on capital, including the growing investment in electrification and the trajectory of our Ford Plus plan. The dividend was also sized to ensure we maintain appropriate optionality to manage continued uncertainties in the external environment. To give you a better sense of our calls on capital between 2020 2025, We expect total capital expenditures of about $40,000,000,000 to $45,000,000,000 or run rate of roughly $7,000,000,000 per year. Now over the same time, we expect to invest over $30,000,000,000 in bevs. Speaker 400:18:12And of the investment in bevs, about 50% is CapEx, to 25% is expense and 25% is direct investments. And these numbers, they'll be dynamic, and We are confident we have ample financial flexibility to increase our investments even if bev adoption further accelerates. Speaker 200:18:35To. Now let me Speaker 400:18:36share with you our early thinking about 2022, a year which, like this one, is likely to experience some industry crosswinds That could drive a range of outcomes. Now we typically don't talk about the upcoming year this soon, and we're not yet prepared to give financial guidance, but we do want to share how we're thinking about next year given the dynamic operating environment. Ford's underlying strengths give me great confidence we can build on our results in 2021. First, Our portfolio of products and services is exceptional, and we have a significant amount of new product coming to market spanning our iconic high volume nameplates. 2nd, our industrial base gives us significant optionality as the adoption of electric vehicles accelerates. Speaker 400:19:273rd, driven by the chip shortage, the roughly $4,000,000 in wholesales We are likely to deliver this year, fall significantly below our capacity. And based on our current assessment, we believe our wholesales could be up about to 10% in 2022, but that number is very dynamic and changes almost weekly. And 4th, The effects of our global redesign, which is largely completed, are now evident and substantial. We have drastically derisked and rationalize our global footprint and product lineup, vastly improving our earnings and cash generation power in the process. Now for headwinds next year, it's difficult to predict the interplay between semiconductor related constraints, volume and pricing, And this will continue to remain dynamic. Speaker 400:20:16For 2021, we expect commodities to be up $3,000,000,000 to $3,500,000,000 And they could be up another $1,500,000,000 in 2022, largely driven by steel and aluminum similar to this year. There will also likely be other inflationary costs, but it's too early to size that right now. Ford Credit is likely to be lower as strong auction values to the Board Plus plan for growth and value creation, and this includes in customer facing technology, connectivity, to our always on relationships with customers and electrification. And of course, we believe the long term payback from those investments will be substantial. Now that wraps up our prepared remarks. Speaker 400:21:08And if you perceive that the upfront portion of these calls is becoming more efficient, well, you're right. That's a function of us being very specific with you and our team about what's truly important and our confidence in executing effectively against those things and reporting accordingly. We'll use the balance of the time to hear and address what's on your mind. Thank you. Operator00:21:40To withdraw your question, press the pound key. We do ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question. From the line of John Murphy with Bank of America. Speaker 600:22:00Good evening, everybody. Thanks for making the call efficient. It's going to be tough to limit to one question, but I will. As you think about the 10% increase you're talking about in 2022 Wholesales, and if we could focus on North America and just assume you're going to do about 2,000,000 units this year in 'twenty one give or take, We're only talking about 200,000 units of increase next year. There's an assumption that price and mix Well, deteriorate as incremental units are produced as semi the semi shortage is relieved. Speaker 600:22:36But given that that's still going to be a relatively low a very low level of production. Do you believe that the price and mix are really going to actually to come under pressure next year. And aren't we really going to stay in a very tight environment that you're selling through and not even building inventory, if that's True, which means the pricing mix might stay very strong next year and you'll still get the benefit. Thanks, Speaker 400:23:05John here. You're right. It's going to remain dynamic and that's what the interplay is going to be. Volume increases For the industry, if they're higher, we'll probably see more pressure on price. If they remain as they are today and we see a moderate increase, I think you're going to continue to see strong pricing and mix continue through next year. Speaker 400:23:25So that's where we have to stay disciplined and we have to stay very focused on managing that well, so that we can have, as you said, the play through next year relative to what happens from an overall volume standpoint, and we're focused on that. So I agree with you. That's going to be one of the key dynamic elements for next year. Speaker 600:23:43And just to follow-up on that, I think right now, based on awards, you have about 213 1,000 units in dealer inventory. Pre COVID travel rate was about 650,000 units. As you think about Ultimately getting into a time where you can rebuild or restock that inventory, where do you think that runs? And how much opportunity is there to try to maintain some of this mix and price discipline to offset any cost inflation and then also invest in the future? Speaker 400:24:17Yes. So if you look at where we ended in September, we ended at about 20 day supply in the U. S. And we're watching it very closely from a day supply standpoint. As we talked about last quarter, our historical day supply was somewhere around 75 days. Speaker 400:24:32We're not going back there. As Jim said, we're going to be very disciplined and we expect to be in the 50 day supply when we're Fully at full capacity and we're running and producing everything that we can. So that's going to be the key. The other thing I would say, John, is that the move as we talked about in our remarks to having more of our sales come through orders, online orders in the order bank, That's really important for us to manage our day supply, so that it's less of a ground stock push through and it's to customer demand pull through based on the orders and we had over 100,000 orders at the end of the quarter and that's grown since then in our order bank That played well for us in the Q3. Speaker 300:25:20139,004 orders Speaker 400:25:22as of today. As of today. Not to be exact. Speaker 600:25:26It sounds like you're on that. And maybe if I could sneak one in just on cap allocation real quick on the dividend. I mean, why now? And I'll hop back in the queue. Speaker 700:25:35Yes. Speaker 400:25:37It's the underlying strength of the business, John. And we're not capital constrained. We're able to fund our initiatives for growth. We know that there are going to be other opportunities that surface. We're confident that we can fund those. Speaker 400:25:52And We're focused on total shareholder returns, not only stock appreciation, but also the dividend. And so given the strength of the business, The Board elected that we would restart the dividend this quarter. Speaker 600:26:05Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:26:09Your next question comes from the line of Dan Levy with Credit Suisse. Speaker 800:26:15Hey, good evening. Thank you for taking the question. Speaker 100:26:21I'd first just like Speaker 800:26:21to ask a question on the shape of Recovery in volumes. A, is this magnesium shortage going to cause any term any sort of to near term supply disruption for you. I mean, we heard some Draconian comments that I could just outright stop European production. And just maybe you can give us a sense broadly of to. How you anticipate the shape of recovery in terms of volumes? Speaker 800:26:47At what point do we get or is your baseline expectation That the chip shortage is fully mitigated and that you can be back at full run rate production. Speaker 400:26:57Yes. So from the magnesium standpoint, when we look at that, we are seeing price pressure on aluminum broadly. We saw that all year and probably see a little bit more price pressure due to the magnesium issue. But Our sheet metal suppliers, our sheet aluminum suppliers don't purchase magnesium from China for North American production. So we don't see that having any significant impact or any impact on us. Speaker 400:27:24We do see the chip issue continuing to run through 'twenty two. As we said, it's very dynamic. Right now, you ask us what we think the sequential increase in supply will be year over year. We think we'll to about 10% more, but that's changing weekly. And we're doing everything we can to get our hands on as many chips as we can. Speaker 400:27:44But we do see that running through 2022. It could extend into 2023, although we do anticipate the scope and severity of that to reduce as we move through 'twenty two into 'twenty three. Speaker 800:27:57Great. Thank you. Second question, I'd like to zoom out just a bit more strategic. I think if we just look at the pace of progress at Ford, just both financially and in terms of EV, AV, helping digital, What we're seeing today is it's far greater than what we saw 12 or 18 months ago, which is actually pretty impressive given large organizations, it takes Time to really affect change. Speaker 700:28:23So I just want to Speaker 800:28:24I'm trying to understand how much of what we're seeing today was something that was always there and to Just always starting to come to the surface now. You're sort of getting the fruits of prior initiatives. Or has something fundamentally changed in the past 12, 18 months. What does this tell us about the pace of change at Fortive and Exelteries? And maybe just to be a bit more specific, because I know you can take that in a number of ways. Speaker 800:28:48Maybe you could answer that specifically to what we're seeing on product and planning on the business transition to EV. Speaker 300:28:59Thank you for your question. A lot of the product we've been working on for several years, we made the tough choices. I would say the answer is we have a plan. It's not an advertising or PR tagline. It's our plan. Speaker 300:29:18Everyone in the company knows what we have to do. We are out of time and we have focus. We need to get an 8% margin like we did this quarter as a company regularly because we have to fund a high growth dev and digital business. It's not to make more money. Yes, it is that. Speaker 300:29:40But it's motivated in the mission of transforming forward through these digital products. So running the ICE business for cash, Getting serious about our cost, our quality, our launches, our 8% return, it's all a mission And the team knows the plan. And I think the culture is starting to change to be quicker, more accountability, less bureaucracy and that mission Permeates through the company. I'm probably the worst person to ask whether something's changed because it sure has changed for me and my leadership team. But to me the proof is in the pudding like our Q3. Speaker 300:30:34And to whether we've really changed as a company will be proven out in our numbers over time like they have the last year. Speaker 800:30:47And just to be more specific on the product front, because I think we're seeing a much faster pace of product. Is the time of development products, like how much have you accelerated that? Meaning, typically in the past, we were here of 3.5 to 4 years of to a drawing board to product and showroom. Is there a new normal for what that is? Speaker 300:31:09If we make up our mind and we come together as a Seemed like we did on Maverick, it could be just 2 years. We did we knocked 20 months off the Maverick development, but it required the leadership team to not have the hand ringing on the studio for 6 months like we normally did. I think that's a new proof point. But the question I ask myself is a little different. When we see a technology change like this, like Bev, it's not just the speed of your product creation, It's can you be flexible and agile on your industrial system like in manufacturing. Speaker 300:31:51We have 3 complete hits on our hands. A Mach E with 200,000 units of demand. That's we have the lightning with over 160,000 orders And the etrans is completely sold out. So how I like to think about it, it's not just the product creation speeding up, it's whole company. And we have to do our job to break constraints now, so that we can deliver 100 of 1000 of battery electrics next year. Speaker 300:32:20That to me is the proof of our change, not just how fast the product creation process works. Speaker 800:32:29Great. Thank you very much. Very helpful. Operator00:32:33Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Brinkman with JPMorgan. Speaker 900:32:38Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I thought to ask a few on the order bank, just given the commentary that it grew 50% sequentially in 3Q excluding the Bronco. So Can you talk about the benefits of the order bank? How it helps to optimize your operations? Speaker 900:32:52And what kind of pricing or other trends you might be seeing with regard to the order bank? And then How much of the increase in orders do you think may stem from the currently very strong new product cadence or from the currently to low inventory environment and what avenues are there available to drive orders as industry conditions eventually normalize? Speaker 300:33:15To. Thank you so much for your question. I'll ask John to comment. From my view, the order bank A model that we're going to in North America that we're in right now has benefits across the patch. We are an incredibly complicated company. Speaker 300:33:33And so having an order bank allows us to push simplification into the order that the customer facing Options, which we need to do and it reduces cost and improves our quality. Number 2, to the operator. It eliminates the need for expensive conquest fixed marketing. Number 3, it's incredibly helpful for industrial system. You cannot imagine, Ryan, how much money we waste by guessing what our launch mix is for a new product. Speaker 300:34:05When you have a Order Bank, especially for new models, you could capacitize the high series mix that are very profitable, right in line with customer demand. So it's incredibly cost effective And it allows you to address the long tail revenues that we have lost in the past because of our ground stock model. And the last one is, it's lower cost. There's less parts hanging around. We can manage our industrial system and our manufacturing in a leaner way. Speaker 300:34:41The question really is how we maintain it, as you said, as the market improves. And the way we're looking at that Not just having a day supply target in the past that we've managed, But actually putting in the infrastructure to maintain or prefer a order based to the system. That means we train our system to put in orders. We reward people for putting in orders. We dynamically price for customers, so that they're incentivized to keep ordering versus buying off the lot. Speaker 300:35:21So it's going to be a journey. It's been a very rewarding one so far, and we're just beginning. This is the model we have to go through as most of our business or Majority of our business goes battery electric and digital. It's the right loyalty model. Speaker 200:35:38Okay, great. Thanks. And then just as Speaker 900:35:40a quick follow-up to that, it It seems as what was discussed earlier that product development times are speeding up, maybe particularly with regard to EVs. The lightning, for example, seems to come together very fast. Another trend seems to be that automakers are revealing their EVs for a longer period of time before the the actual start of production, maybe because they're so eager to show them, consumers are so clamoring for them. Does that mean that you think that Order banks and ordering in advance might be even more popular with electric vehicles. What are you seeing with regards to that? Speaker 300:36:17The move to a digital product means we have to go to 100% loyalty model. So, the reason why you're seeing us to launch battery electrics early is very simple. It's our Super Bowl ad. Our new Super Bowl ad, our new Detroit Motor Show is our reveal, Because it starts the clock on reservations and you have to do it early enough so your industrial system gets informed by the results of your reservation. That's the closed loop that has to happen. Speaker 300:36:46We need to open it early enough so that our industrial system can react to the orders We don't waste money and take advantage of long tail revenue. And it's a more controlled environment than to Broadcast Media Advertising on the Super Bowl. Speaker 900:37:06Very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:37:11Your next question comes from the line of Rod Lachey with Wolfe Research. Speaker 1000:37:18Hi, everybody. I have just two questions. So first, you've got a lot of The growth that you're targeting in Bez and Digital Businesses, so it's not surprising that we would see some structural cost inflation. What we're seeing right now is actually really benign. It's $200,000,000 in the quarter considering what you've got going on. Speaker 1000:37:40But maybe can you talk a little bit about to how we should think about the feathering in of those additional structural costs, which presumably come in ahead of the revenue. So how should we think about that as to look out to the next year or 2. Speaker 400:37:57Yes, Rod. We'll start to see those come in as we get into 'twenty two And then they'll feather in through 'twenty three as we continue to ramp our investments in our plan, our priorities, not only in the products, the bevs, but also as we're building out our customer facing technologies, our connectivity, etcetera. So Yes. You'll see that start to come in on a year over year basis next year and it will continue into 'twenty three. Speaker 1000:38:28Can you just give us any Sort of brackets around what I mean, you did mention that 25% of the EV spending will be expensed, but any sort of On the magnitude of that, what that headwind Speaker 400:38:41is? I'm not ready to do that today for 2022 and going in through 'twenty three. We're completely targeted on getting to that 8% in 2023, so we'll manage it within But today, I'm not ready to talk in that level of detail about. Speaker 1000:39:02Okay. And I was a little surprised about the comment about just 10% volume growth for next year. It seemed to me like the Renaissance fire in Texas storms alone might have knocked 200,000 units off of your production in Q2. And it wasn't too long ago that you guys were routinely doing over 700,000 units quarter. So, do you have any thoughts that you might be able to share about when would you be able to get back up to that kind of a level to production and if so, when should we expect that to happen? Speaker 400:39:41Right. So I think what you'll find is that As you look through 2022, the first half will have less supply than through the second half. And as I said earlier, we see this Mitigating over time, it may extend into 2023, but I would say that we should be back up and running based on what we're seeing today run rate the end of next year into 2023. And then in 2023, we'd start to rebuild our inventories. But it's dynamic, Rod, and it's hard to make a pinpoint call at this point in time. Speaker 400:40:16But we wanted to share with you what we're seeing is that we're seeing about 10% for next year. Speaker 200:40:22And Speaker 400:40:22we see that the chips constraints going to still hit us. It's It's going to still be a factor next year. So we have to keep managing as we are this year. Speaker 1000:40:30Got it. Okay. Thank you. Operator00:40:34Your next question comes from the line of Brian Johnson with Barclays. Speaker 1100:40:40Two questions. First a quick, Not quite housekeeping, but definitely balance sheet's question. As you restated the dividend at the level, Yes. Just could you maybe talk us through the investment grade rating implications and timeline to get there That you and the Board considered when sending that. Speaker 400:41:04So we're going to continue to work and focus on Improving our business, right? Our target is to have an investment grade balance sheet, but that's going to come by improving the business and you're seeing the strength of that come through. And so that's what we're focused on. What the rating agencies decide to do with our rating, Bell managed that, that's up to them. What we're laser focused on is improving the run rate of the business, improving our performance, improving our overall metrics and you. Speaker 400:41:34Eventually, the rating agencies and the ratings will take care of themselves. Speaker 1100:41:38Okay. Second question. As you think about that 10% volume increase, rough guidance, a couple of things. 1, you. Where do you see fleet sales coming back as you kind of bring that up? Speaker 1100:41:56And second, are you going to take a different attitude towards fleet sales than in Ford of the past. I remember Don Leclair saying he had 2 factories making Tauruses and rental car companies were about the only buyers of that. And so, but there's also really rental cars, but Maybe some of the government business that's not police is not quite the same. And kind of related to that, as you kind of think about prioritizing production, Are there models where you're more comfortable, you'll get good price retention? And other models, and I'm going to pick on like to the Escape maybe that have a lot of competition in their segment and as capacity comes back less likely to hold price, Same compared to a Bronco. Speaker 400:42:46So it's interesting because I remember those days when Don probably made that comment about rental fleets and that they were low margin, etcetera. I think what you're finding is business Models are changing and the fleet business is evolving just like everything else in our industry. And we see that there could potentially be a positive fleet business where to make good money. And so we're not going to shy away from that if we speak that it's right for our brand and we think it's right for the bottom line. And so we're going to continue to look at fleets differently. Speaker 400:43:26We're going to continue to think about vehicles as a service and what that potential holds for us as that business model changes. And we'll see where that takes us. But we're not going to go back to the times where we're putting in capacity, we're pumping out Unit selling them at little to no margin for rental cars. That's not going to happen again. Speaker 200:43:49To. I'm Speaker 300:43:50sorry. It's okay. I was just going to say our fleet business now, now that we've rationalized the company, Our fleet business is very strategic for us. It's also very profitable. It certainly varies in Europe and North America and China. Speaker 300:44:08Different fleet segments have different profitability. The one thing I would ask you to think about is that to. Most of the fleet that matters at Ford is commercial vehicles. And the most important commercial vehicles for us is small, medium sized businesses. And those are very profitable business for us, for transit, for Super Duty. Speaker 300:44:32That's where Ford excels in the fleet business And it's smaller fleets, it's not big fleet sales. So the texture of this is that we're revenue to managing the company very carefully. We know the margins by geography, even within the country, and we know by distribution channel. So this is a very thoughtful approach for us. But strategically, especially because of the Pro business and its profitability, We want to make sure we have we're a reliable partner with fleet customers. Speaker 300:45:09They do business with companies That are reliable. They don't come in and out of the market. They do business with companies that have a full range of products, a full range of services. That's why Marion is investing in Ford Pro and why we're vertically integrating our services. So I think we have a really good to the profitable fleet business around the world. Speaker 300:45:33We look at the margins very carefully, but it's strategically very important for the company To be a reliable partner. Speaker 1100:45:43Okay. And in terms of price retention and how that's going to vary across your product line? Speaker 300:45:52Well, John, I think you should answer that one in terms of to how we revenue manage in a constrained environment. Speaker 400:46:02Yes. So as you would expect, We're very conscientious about the dynamic of the supply and demand and the impact that has on the pricing. And we look at this on a daily basis, managing our incentives, looking at if we should be taking top line pricing given the inflationary pressures we're seeing. And as we talked about, to the very pressures we're seeing. And as we talked about, we're not going to go back to the old habits of loading up the dealers with stock and then looking for the push through of for sales. Speaker 400:46:36We're going to focus more on orders coming through online, specific orders to customers being satisfied, understanding what their demands are, simplifying the system. And with all of that, we expect to retain quite a bit of the price. Now will it mitigate as we go through next year as supply and demand comes more in balance and into 'twenty three? Yes. But our job is going to be to manage that and retain as much pricing as we can and while providing customers good value for those products. Speaker 400:47:08So It's something that we look at very closely on a daily basis. Speaker 300:47:14Thank you. In the Escape business, We now have another player called Bronco Sport in the segment. It's incredibly profitable and people really appreciate the product. We are not in the business of commodity products in that segment anymore. We've changed. Speaker 300:47:31We made an investment several years ago. Speaker 1100:47:34Right. Operator00:47:39Your next question comes from the line of Colin Langan with Wells Fargo. Speaker 1200:47:45Great. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to clarify, I thought your original guidance was that the first the second half was supposed to be up in volume 30%. I mean, I'm not sure if I'm misreading it. It sounds like Q3 may be up a bit from Q4. Speaker 1200:48:00So is that 30% still not accurate? Obviously, it's kind of important when you think to 10% of the 2022 what base you're going off of? Speaker 400:48:07Yes. Colin, that's a great question. Thank you. Now we did say last quarter that we expected the second half to be up about 30%. Looks like it's going to be up somewhere around 15%. Speaker 400:48:20And so what you're seeing flow through is the strength we had in the quarter relative to the top line and other actions that we took relative to cost, etcetera. So when you look at that walk, that bridge between Q3 to Q4, we expect market factors to be positive. We said we think Going to be up sequentially about 10%. We also see a little bit stronger mix continuing. And then of course you'll have some product related costs, production related costs associated with that, but net net, market factors net of those costs to produce The increased volumes is going to be positive. Speaker 400:48:57What we're seeing from a headwind standpoint, if you look at Q3 to Q4, are commodities. We expect that on a quarter over quarter basis, they're going to be up about $700,000,000 And if you look at that So far, year to date, we've seen about $1,600,000,000 of commodities hit us. And when you get to the Q4 and you get the cumulative effect On a year over year basis, commodities are going to be up about another $1,500,000,000 in the 4th quarter. So year over year up $1,500,000,000 sequentially Up $700,000,000 And then we are going to see some higher warranty costs on a sequential basis in the Q4 for to things that we have to take care of around extended warranties and a little bit higher coverages. But again, on a year over year basis, Our warranty will improve in the Q4 and full year on a year over year basis. Speaker 400:49:51Our warranty, we expect to be good by about 1,400,000,000. Speaker 1200:49:56Got it. Well, that's very helpful. Speaker 400:49:58Does that help you with the bridge? Speaker 1200:50:01Yes. No, that's great. Just secondly, in terms of the redesign plan, it's been out for a while. Is India the last major step? I mean, is this going to sort of Is this it? Speaker 1200:50:13So maybe next quarter, maybe the last time we see these slides? Just kind of curious or is there more still coming? Speaker 300:50:20Well, I think we're in good shape for now. Obviously, the acceleration of the bed business and our ice assets will be, I think, you the next big transition for the whole industry, not just Ford. But Ford specifically, India's you to really the principal region country where we have struggled over time. And It's really great to see the progress the team is making in India and the very vibrant position we'll now have with the new lineup. And I'd just like to highlight the progress in South America for this quarter. Speaker 300:51:00John, when's the last time we were profitable in South America. Speaker 400:51:05I believe it was 2013. Speaker 300:51:08So let's hang that in the air for a second, 2013. Operator00:51:20Your next question comes from the line of Joseph Spak with RBC. Speaker 1300:51:27Thank you. Maybe just one quick one on the free cash guidance, which I think you maintained despite the EBIT guidance going higher. So is there something going on with working capital or something? Because you're saying you're releasing more vehicles. I would think that would actually be a positive factor in the Q4 as well. Speaker 1300:51:48So I'm curious what the offset is. Speaker 400:51:51Yes. So what we're seeing there is that We've got the EBIT coming in right, that improvement, but the less favorable improvement in working capital and timing differences is hitting us in the quarter because we have lower than anticipated volume in the back half of the quarter due to the chip constraints and so we get hit with that working capital at the end of the year. So that's what's happening to us on the free cash flow. So it's a timing issue. Speaker 1300:52:19Okay. And then, you. I want to go back to some of the announcements you've made over the past couple of months. And I know you talked again about the spend today and you're not spending more than $30,000,000,000 and I appreciate the breakdown you gave of sort of How you're spending that? Maybe this is just me, but I actually find it still fairly difficult to track what exactly you're spending over the coming years because I believe some of that has already been spent. Speaker 1300:52:55So is it possible to Maybe just say like of that $30,000,000,000 what's being spent like starting next year through the middle of the decade? Speaker 400:53:05So of the $30,000,000,000 when you look at the cap, very little we said about half of that was cap, Very little of that has been spent through 2021 relative to the $15,000,000,000 about half of it. Of course, you're going to see the expense front loaded because that's primarily the engineering that we have in developing the battery electric vehicles. And then the direct investment, which is about 25% of it, that's for things like the vertical integration of the JVs and those types of things. And you Saw those announcements this quarter with our plan in Blue Oval SK, the battery plant. So that's how we're going To unfold that bev spending over time. Speaker 1300:53:51Okay. That's helpful. I appreciate it. Operator00:53:57Your next question comes from the line of Itay Michaeli with Citi. Speaker 500:54:03Great. Thanks. Good evening, everybody. Just two quick ones for me. First, is there any update on the Blue Cruise deployment, including through OTA, maybe some initial customer feedback? Speaker 300:54:15Great. Thank you. We're shipping with Mach E F Series now Blue Cruise as they leave the factory, And we're going to be OTA ing BlueCooz in the Q1. We wanted to improve the customer experience. So We pushed it back in terms of an OTA, because we wanted to be much simpler for the customer than was originally planned. Speaker 300:54:40And that takes a little planning to consolidate. Often these Level 2 systems require multiple updates to the car. We want it to be very simple. That took a little bit more work on our team's part. And so, it's available As we ship products now and as an OTA, it will be in the Q1 and it will be a lot simpler to use and get that OTA and update for the customer than it was originally planned. Speaker 300:55:11Does that answer your question? Speaker 500:55:13Yes. Thank you, Jim. That's very, very helpful. And then maybe just a super quick follow-up, just a point of clarification. Thank you for the 2022 initial indications. Speaker 500:55:21To. At least it mentions you expect to build on the strong performance in 2021. I'm just curious if we should interpret that as you expect to grow EBIT adjusted year over year in 2022. Speaker 400:55:36Yes. So we're not going to give a number at this point in time. But What we're saying is that the strength of our new product lineup, our high volume nameplates like in the strength of what we're seeing from Mach E, as Jim said, we think there's about Demand for 200,000 units. We've got the Bronco, Maverick, E Transit, F-one hundred and fifty Lightning are coming. It's the best lineup we've had. Speaker 400:55:57And so that's going to be a tailwind for us For sure as we go into next year. And you're seeing that come through this year. And we're going to build on that. But we're also going to have to manage The headwinds that we've talked about and the other puts and takes. But what we can tell you is we are laser focused I'm getting to the 8% target in 2023. Speaker 400:56:18And so we will manage into next year. These are the types of things we're seeing from a puts and takes standpoint, to the strength, the tailwinds and then the headwinds and we will manage that next year and we'll be on the path next year towards our 8% target in 2020. Speaker 500:56:33Great. That's super helpful. Thank you. Operator00:56:38Your next question comes from the line of Emmanuel Rosner with Deutsche Bank. Speaker 700:56:45Thank you very much and good evening. Two questions, please. Hi. Two questions. The first one, to Very pleased to see Beyond targets and for the 8% margins by 2023, to a big focus of the company and clearly showing some progress there. Speaker 700:57:08How should we think about the impact on this from to the margins on your electric vehicles. Obviously, the scale takes some time to build up, but you're going through that right now And probably have some level of visibility. So what's your latest thinking around trajectory for margins on some of your BEVs? And to what extent you will or will not impact overall company margins and potentially how to think about it beyond 2023. Speaker 300:57:43Thanks. Such an important question for the company. I'd like John to comment on the margins. Right now, we have to 3 high volume, very well accepted battery electric vehicles on our hands, Mach E, E Transit and the F-one hundred and fifty Lightning. So the way we look at it is We want to grow this business really fast. Speaker 300:58:09Just the Mach E demand itself, we think is 200,000 units. That does not include the Lightning Or the etransit. So our first job is, of course, post job 1 customer experience improvement, to post job 1 simplification and improvement of the cost of the vehicle and post job 1 quality improvements using the data off the vehicles. Perhaps our biggest job, in my opinion, is to break the constraints we have in manufacturing and our supply chain, So we can get these products out to these customers. And that post job 1 orientation is quite different than to how we historically looked at the ICE business where we wait to a minor change or something later to make those changes. Speaker 300:59:00The constraint for Mach E right now is batteries. We think we can break some of those constraints by working creatively with our China team and get batteries from China. So stay tuned and I'll ask John to comment on the margins. Speaker 400:59:16Right. Well, as we talked about last quarter, Mach E is EBIT profitable today. But you. We also know that the margins are not as strong as our ICE margins. And so we're working on that. Speaker 400:59:29Over time, we expect as we scale, as you said, And as the technology costs come down, we will grow those margins. And ultimately, we do expect with these connected vehicles, These connected beds that the profit margins will be better than what we're seeing on ice today, but that's over time. Speaker 700:59:51Thank you. And then my second question was on Argo. So very encouraged to see that You would like to encourage them as supportive of accessing the public markets. How do you envisage the future relationship between Forward and Argo to be how important is that going to be as part of your overall business model? Speaker 301:00:14To mission critical. For us to truly disrupt personal ownership, we have to democratize shared mobility And the self driving and mobility in the driven world are absolutely mission critical for the company to disrupt itself. I am really proud of the team's progress. It's different than our competitors in the space. We've gone to the most difficult miles in 4, 5 different cities. Speaker 301:00:48To our mapping, our SDS deployment and the algorithms are built to be scaled So we're not going to a small market area in easy miles like others. We're taking on the toughest problems now and building our capability for scaling quickly. And I think that's always been our approach. The relationship with Argo and us and Volkswagen is very close. But we do see us moving into more of a production mode now. Speaker 301:01:28And we're really ready for that. And we think this will take more capital and a little more time, and we think the access to public capital It's really mission critical for our journey. Speaker 701:01:43Thank you. Operator01:01:46Your final question comes from the line of Adam Jonas with Morgan Stanley. Speaker 201:02:09I think explained as lucidly and clearly the always on and the Ford Pro stuff The way you have, right. So you get kudos for that. To. You're seeing some of your competitors make some cyclical investments in the downstream to make kind of for that customer experience. Volkswagen buying your car And some startups including ones that you know pretty well kind of owning that physical part of it. Speaker 201:02:40Is there any to Gap in your strategy as you go always on and really the full service. Is there anything that you want to vertically integrate to under the Ford you. You know umbrella order is working with the franchises and the 3rd parties sufficient given this big change in this model? Thanks. Speaker 301:03:04Great question. Our philosophy is different. We think partnership on the demand layer for autonomy and pre autonomy is mission critical for our always on strategy. Are there pieces missing that we're working really hard on? You bet you. Speaker 301:03:24We're not going to talk about them today though. Speaker 201:03:28All right. Then just a follow-up from me and your dealers. They're crushing it. So I think we'll say they're gouging. That might be unfair because they're paying high prices too for their vehicles. Speaker 201:03:40But we're starting to see 4 handle, 5 handle, to 6 handle GPUs, really big chunk of the price of a car, Jim. At the risk of selling, do you think they're making too much? Because I know that's a gotcha question. Do you think there's fallout that you can capture to the Consumer. Speaker 301:04:07Well, this is also really important. First of all, I would say the heart and soul of Ford's strategy is our commercial business. In that business where vehicles are highly utilized, Our dealer network is one of our most important advantages versus the new competitors. I'll give you some statistics. We have 6 to 50 dedicated commercial, mostly service centers in the United States and 850 to transit centers across Europe. Speaker 301:04:38That will take a lot of time and a lot of money for someone to recreate. Every one of those dealers Speaker 701:04:44to This Speaker 301:04:44has multiple bodybuilders that can call designed for those trades And those vacations for our Ford vehicles. So the dealer body is not only important for to the after sales experience and making sure those vehicles can be serviced, but it's also mission critical for the outfit of those products. To So the dealer network is absolutely strategically critical for our leadership And maintaining that as we go to digital connected vehicles for our commercial customers. There's no doubt that many customers 1 is 3 or 4 clicks, very easy service experience on the retail side, and we're working really carefully on that, Including a simple e commerce platform. And actually in China, our bed business already has 25 direct stores by the end of this year. Speaker 301:05:43So we're starting to experiment. I think our dealers have served us really well. I'm very proud of them. I'm especially proud of our commercial dealer and we are very vigilant. You can imagine, I get lots of e mails every day about transaction prices from customers on our hottest products. Speaker 301:06:03And we all feel obligated to represent the brand professionally Speaker 801:06:16to the operator. Operator01:06:16This concludes the Ford Motor Company Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallMeta Platforms Q3 202100:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) MDWerks Earnings HeadlinesFord (NYSE: F) Stock Back Below $10 Today. Should You Buy?April 8 at 1:00 PM | 247wallst.comFord (NYSE: F) Stock Back Below $10 Today. 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Email Address About MDWerksMDWerks (OTCMKTS:MDWK), together with its subsidiaries, provides energy waving technologies in the United States. The company offers green and radio wave technologies. It also produces and sells alcoholic beverages, including whiskey and vodka. In addition, the company develops radio frequency applications. It serves structural engineering, food and beverage, alcoholic beverages, manufacturing, and adhesives industries. 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There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, my name is Erica, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome you to the Ford Motor Company Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Lynn Antipas Tyson, Executive Director of Investor Relations. Speaker 100:00:35Thank you, Erica. Welcome to Ford Motor Company's Q3 2021 earnings call. With me today are Jim Farley, our President and CEO and John Waller, our Chief Financial Officer. Also joining us for Q and A is Marion Harris, CEO of Ford Credit. Today's discussions include some non GAAP references. Speaker 100:00:53These are reconciled to the most comparable U. S. GAAP measures in the appendix of our earnings deck. You You can find the deck along with the rest of our earnings materials and other important content at shareholder. Ford.com, including some updated videos and proof points around our Ford Plus plan for growth. Speaker 100:01:10Today's discussion also includes forward looking statements about our expectations. Speaker 200:01:15To the operator. Speaker 100:01:15Actual results may differ from those stated. The most significant factors that could cause actual results to differ are included on Page 23. Unless otherwise noted, all comparisons are year over year. Company EBIT, EPS and free cash flow are on an adjusted basis. Product mix is volume weighted. Speaker 100:01:31To a quick update on our IR events for the balance of the year. We have 5. On Monday, 1st November 1st, Wolf will host a fireside chat with to John Waller and Hao Tai Tang, our Chief Product Platform and Operations Officer. On the 18th November, Barclays will host a virtual fireside chat to Ted Canis, our CEO of Ford Pro. In December, on 3rd, Goldman Sachs will host a virtual fireside chat with Lisa Drake, our Chief Operating Officer for North America. Speaker 100:01:59On the 3rd Credit Suisse, we'll host fireside chat with Haotai Tang. And finally, on 9th, Deutsche Bank will host a virtual fireside chat with to Alex Purdy, our Director of Business Operations, Enterprise Connectivity. Now I'll turn the call over to Jim Farley. Speaker 300:02:13Thank you, Lynn. Hello, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Well, this month marks 1 year since we began executing our Ford Plus plan. It creates growth, value and it allows us to win in the emerging area of electric and connected vehicles. We built a strong team that combines top leaders from Ford with world class talent recruited from outside of our company, to specific talent, specific people that are largely outside of our industry. Speaker 300:02:50This leadership team is committed to this plan And we're accelerating our progress. Afford Plus is not a tagline. It's not advertising. It's a larger, more ambitious way to think about our business and how we bring value to our customers. We're creating iconic and distinctive products that only Ford can do, increasingly always on relationships with our customers to an ever improving user experiences, all while creating value for our shareholders. Speaker 300:03:24We're fully vested in this future and we're taking big swings. Key to the plan is harnessing the power of connectivity. We're designing a new generation of fully networked vehicles, not delegated to our supply chain, but done inside the company to revolutionize the experience of owning and operating Ford vehicle. That's embedded technology to unleash unlimited innovation. We're scaling the number of vehicles capable of over their updates. Speaker 300:03:54We'll be moving from 1,000,000 vehicles today to 33,000,000 by 2028. To Dott's scale. At the same time, we're moving aggressively to lead the electric vehicle revolution, substantially expanding our battery production as we speak today in the U. S. In fact, to the operator. Speaker 300:04:15We already announced plans that will give us enough battery production to meet our mid decade goal of 141 Gigawatts, Which is enough to build more than 1,000,000 battery electric vehicles a year, and I think we'll need more. Our $7,000,000,000 investment in Blue Oval City in Tennessee and the Blue Oval SK Battery Park in Kentucky sets a new standard for scale, to Sustainability, Advanced Manufacturing and Training the Next Generation of Technology Leaders. At the same time, to the $1,000,000,000 of investment in our electrified center in Cologne, Germany will allow us to go all electric soon. That center will be all electric by 2023. We're making final preparations to launch the F-one hundred and fifty Lightning. Speaker 300:05:07To the defining zero emission version of America's best selling vehicle for the past 40 plus years. To our all electric Mustang Mach E is a hit with customers not just in the U. S. But around the world, Bringing a stunning number of new customers to the Ford brand. Over 90% of the Mach E owners say they would recommend to Ama key to other customers, critical as a new generation of battery electric customers make new brand choices. Speaker 300:05:41Our challenge now is to break production constraints and increase availability to meet this incredible demand, both in North America and in Europe and also in China, the biggest EV market in the world, where we are just starting production of Mach E. We believe the global demand just for Mustang Mach E could approach about 200,000 vehicles a year. To We've created a new organization, Ford Pro, to change and power the future of work with compelling commercial vehicles, distribution and services, while growing revenues to Ford. To in a few weeks, we will start production of the new E Transit, an electric version of the world's best selling commercial van. To the Q3 alone, Ford Live, Europe's new connected uptime center, which I wish you could all see to our commercial customers, helps customers in the U. Speaker 300:06:44K. Secure additional uptime, preventing about $8,000,000 of lost revenue We're reinventing icons like Bronco and creating new ones like Maverick. In fact, the all new Maverick, 42 miles per gallon, I might add, is the 1st standard hybrid pickup in the United States. It's also America's most fuel efficient hybrid pickup. This is the strongest, most compelling lineup I've ever seen from any mass market brand In my career, and we are creating a spring loaded future as we emerge from the chip shortages and COVID constraints. Speaker 300:07:28We continue to make important strides in the technology and go to market strategy for autonomous vehicles. In the Q2, we told you about a new partnership with Argo AI and Lyft. And in the Q3, we announced a new partnership with Argo AI and Walmart. This is Walmart's first ever multi city autonomous delivery service and it will be anchored in cities where we already have operations. To not the easiest miles in one city, but multiple cities and hard miles. Speaker 300:07:59In addition to making real progress on autonomy vehicles, to operating domains, SDS. We fully support Argo AI's aspiration to access public capital. To build this future and generate the margins and cash flow we need to fund Ford Plus, We had to turn around our automotive operations and improve our competitiveness. Our results in the 3rd quarter Sure, we are making significant progress. In fact, company wide, we achieved an 8.4% EBIT margin, including 10.1% in North America. Speaker 300:08:40Those margins, I'll remind you, are in line with our targets for 2023. To more importantly, our operations outside of North America are likely to post the best performance in 4 years. Please note the performance in South America, largely driven by our success of our global redesign. We've been able to achieve this while thoughtfully managing our supply chain for short term sustainable improvements, including semiconductors and prioritizing high to Demand and High Profit Vehicles. Now before I turn over to John, a few thoughts. Speaker 300:09:20I believe We have the right plan to drive growth and unlock unprecedented value. You are already seeing a favorable change in the slope of our earnings and cash flow. To the operator. Given the strength of our business this year, we are increasing our full year adjusted EBIT guidance to between $10,500,000,000 $11,500,000,000 As we plan in earnest for next year, we're excited and energized about the opportunity in front of us And clear that we have so much more work to do to deliver on Ford's potential. The word I would leave you with is focus. Speaker 300:09:59To the operator. The competitive environment has never been more interesting and tough, and we intend to live up to our promise to compete like a challenger, to focusing on our top priorities to unlock Ford Plus growth with customers at the very center of everything we do. Now I'll turn it over to John, who will take you through our results for the quarter, our outlook for the full year, our capital allocation priorities and our expectations heading into next year. John? Speaker 400:10:28Thank you, Jim. Now in the face of continued industry wide semiconductor constraints, We stayed focused on our plan, strengthening our portfolio and investing in opportunities fundamental to Growth and Value Creation. We delivered a solid quarter with $3,000,000,000 in adjusted company EBIT and a margin of 8.4%. Free cash flow of $7,700,000,000 was, as we expected, up sharply on a sequential basis, driven by the positive working capital effects from higher wholesales and EBIT. We ended the quarter with strong cash and liquidity at over 31,000,000,000 and $47,000,000,000 respectively. Speaker 400:11:12Now across our automotive business, our playbook remains consistent as we optimize production for customer orders, new launches in our most profitable vehicles. And as expected, on a sequential basis, to our shareholders. Our wholesales improved dramatically as chip supply for Ford improved. We also remain disciplined with incentive spending and mix management, which to the Board Credit delivered another solid quarter with $1,100,000,000 in EBT as auction values continue to remain strong and credit losses to continue at near record lows. For the Q4, we're assuming a sequential increase in wholesale. Speaker 400:11:59We also expect continued healthy mix and net pricing and solid results from Ford Credit, although not as strong as the 3rd quarter. Headwinds include inflationary impacts on commodities and freight, and we also expect planned sequential increases in our Ford Plus modernization investments, including customer experience and IT. So let me share with you some highlights from the quarter before I turn to guidance, to capital allocation in our preliminary view of 2022. With improved chip supply, North America wholesales increased sequentially by 67% as the team prioritized launches, customer orders and high margin units, while reducing the number of vehicles built But waiting for chips. Demand remains strong for our exciting vehicles. Speaker 400:12:47The order bank we are building paid off in the 3rd quarter, Representing 28% of our retail sales in the 3rd quarter and reaching a high of 31% in September. And our overall customer orders increased over 50% from the 2nd quarter to more than 100,000 orders excluding Bronco. With a 10.1 percent EBIT margin in the quarter, North America is now at a 9% margin year to date, just 100 basis points shy of our 2023 target of 10%. To South America marked its 8th consecutive quarter of year over year improvement in EBIT and the business run rate is now approaching breakeven. The region also launched its new commercial vehicle organization with the introduction of the new Transit, which is manufactured in Uruguay. Speaker 400:13:42This transit is the 1st light commercial van to market in Brazil that includes connectivity as a standard feature. In Europe, the underlying trajectory of our business continues to strengthen, though the adverse impact from chips has masked this improvement. In the Q3, the business lost about 50,000 units, which would have had a substantial favorable impact on EBIT. Our leadership as the number one commercial vehicle brand continued in the quarter along with an extremely robust order bank. In China, Lincoln continues to perform well, extending its success in the most profitable segment, Luxury. Speaker 400:14:24With retail sales up 24% year over year, in fact, Lincoln has doubled its share of the China luxury market over the past 18 months. Our newly created Bev organization to open its first 13 direct to consumer Ford Select City stores with a total of 25 expected to open by year end. In IMG, our leadership team in India made the difficult decision to end manufacturing following accumulated operating losses of more than $2,000,000,000 over the past 10 years. Going forward, we will focus on importing iconic vehicles, including EVs. Overall, IMG had a solid quarter, capitalizing on our strengths, including Ranger. Speaker 400:15:07Now as Jim highlighted, the underlying strength of our business supports increasing our adjusted EBIT guidance for 2021 to between $10,500,000,000 $11,500,000,000 and that's despite a lower than anticipated improvement in chip availability in the second half of the year. Consistent with our adjusted EBIT guidance through this year, our updated guidance for 2021 includes the $900,000,000 to non cash gain on our investment in Rivian in our Q1 adjusted results. So let me spend a minute on Rivian. Now in the event that Rivian completes its IPO, we will record any gain on our investment and any subsequent adjustments to a special item. Accordingly, we will recast the $900,000,000 non cash gain from adjusted EBIT in the Q1 to a special item. Speaker 400:16:02If Rivian completes their IPO in the Q4, we will make this change when we report our Q4 earnings on February 3, to 2022. Our guidance for 2021 adjusted free cash flow is unchanged at $4,000,000,000 to $5,000,000,000 Reflecting the higher EBIT, but less favorable improvement in working capital and timing difference timing differences. Now this is due to lower than anticipated volume than previously assumed in the back half of the quarter, and that's as a result of chip constraints. We do expect free cash flow to increase with higher production and the associated improvement in supplier payables and other timing differences. Speaker 500:16:45To the operator. Speaker 400:16:45So now let me turn to capital allocation, which again is the foundation of our value creation framework. Our capital allocation discipline is driving a strong to the core business and balance sheet that provides the flexibility to invest in new growth opportunities as we deliver our Ford Plus plan. To the operator. Ultimately, it ensures we return value to our shareholders, both in the form of a higher share price and dividends. Today, we announced the reinstatement of our dividend. Speaker 400:17:15Our Board has approved restarting a regular quarterly dividend of $0.10 per share in the Q4 of 2021. Importantly, the dividend reflects our confidence in the improving run rate of the business and our ability to fund all of our calls on capital, including the growing investment in electrification and the trajectory of our Ford Plus plan. The dividend was also sized to ensure we maintain appropriate optionality to manage continued uncertainties in the external environment. To give you a better sense of our calls on capital between 2020 2025, We expect total capital expenditures of about $40,000,000,000 to $45,000,000,000 or run rate of roughly $7,000,000,000 per year. Now over the same time, we expect to invest over $30,000,000,000 in bevs. Speaker 400:18:12And of the investment in bevs, about 50% is CapEx, to 25% is expense and 25% is direct investments. And these numbers, they'll be dynamic, and We are confident we have ample financial flexibility to increase our investments even if bev adoption further accelerates. Speaker 200:18:35To. Now let me Speaker 400:18:36share with you our early thinking about 2022, a year which, like this one, is likely to experience some industry crosswinds That could drive a range of outcomes. Now we typically don't talk about the upcoming year this soon, and we're not yet prepared to give financial guidance, but we do want to share how we're thinking about next year given the dynamic operating environment. Ford's underlying strengths give me great confidence we can build on our results in 2021. First, Our portfolio of products and services is exceptional, and we have a significant amount of new product coming to market spanning our iconic high volume nameplates. 2nd, our industrial base gives us significant optionality as the adoption of electric vehicles accelerates. Speaker 400:19:273rd, driven by the chip shortage, the roughly $4,000,000 in wholesales We are likely to deliver this year, fall significantly below our capacity. And based on our current assessment, we believe our wholesales could be up about to 10% in 2022, but that number is very dynamic and changes almost weekly. And 4th, The effects of our global redesign, which is largely completed, are now evident and substantial. We have drastically derisked and rationalize our global footprint and product lineup, vastly improving our earnings and cash generation power in the process. Now for headwinds next year, it's difficult to predict the interplay between semiconductor related constraints, volume and pricing, And this will continue to remain dynamic. Speaker 400:20:16For 2021, we expect commodities to be up $3,000,000,000 to $3,500,000,000 And they could be up another $1,500,000,000 in 2022, largely driven by steel and aluminum similar to this year. There will also likely be other inflationary costs, but it's too early to size that right now. Ford Credit is likely to be lower as strong auction values to the Board Plus plan for growth and value creation, and this includes in customer facing technology, connectivity, to our always on relationships with customers and electrification. And of course, we believe the long term payback from those investments will be substantial. Now that wraps up our prepared remarks. Speaker 400:21:08And if you perceive that the upfront portion of these calls is becoming more efficient, well, you're right. That's a function of us being very specific with you and our team about what's truly important and our confidence in executing effectively against those things and reporting accordingly. We'll use the balance of the time to hear and address what's on your mind. Thank you. Operator00:21:40To withdraw your question, press the pound key. We do ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question. From the line of John Murphy with Bank of America. Speaker 600:22:00Good evening, everybody. Thanks for making the call efficient. It's going to be tough to limit to one question, but I will. As you think about the 10% increase you're talking about in 2022 Wholesales, and if we could focus on North America and just assume you're going to do about 2,000,000 units this year in 'twenty one give or take, We're only talking about 200,000 units of increase next year. There's an assumption that price and mix Well, deteriorate as incremental units are produced as semi the semi shortage is relieved. Speaker 600:22:36But given that that's still going to be a relatively low a very low level of production. Do you believe that the price and mix are really going to actually to come under pressure next year. And aren't we really going to stay in a very tight environment that you're selling through and not even building inventory, if that's True, which means the pricing mix might stay very strong next year and you'll still get the benefit. Thanks, Speaker 400:23:05John here. You're right. It's going to remain dynamic and that's what the interplay is going to be. Volume increases For the industry, if they're higher, we'll probably see more pressure on price. If they remain as they are today and we see a moderate increase, I think you're going to continue to see strong pricing and mix continue through next year. Speaker 400:23:25So that's where we have to stay disciplined and we have to stay very focused on managing that well, so that we can have, as you said, the play through next year relative to what happens from an overall volume standpoint, and we're focused on that. So I agree with you. That's going to be one of the key dynamic elements for next year. Speaker 600:23:43And just to follow-up on that, I think right now, based on awards, you have about 213 1,000 units in dealer inventory. Pre COVID travel rate was about 650,000 units. As you think about Ultimately getting into a time where you can rebuild or restock that inventory, where do you think that runs? And how much opportunity is there to try to maintain some of this mix and price discipline to offset any cost inflation and then also invest in the future? Speaker 400:24:17Yes. So if you look at where we ended in September, we ended at about 20 day supply in the U. S. And we're watching it very closely from a day supply standpoint. As we talked about last quarter, our historical day supply was somewhere around 75 days. Speaker 400:24:32We're not going back there. As Jim said, we're going to be very disciplined and we expect to be in the 50 day supply when we're Fully at full capacity and we're running and producing everything that we can. So that's going to be the key. The other thing I would say, John, is that the move as we talked about in our remarks to having more of our sales come through orders, online orders in the order bank, That's really important for us to manage our day supply, so that it's less of a ground stock push through and it's to customer demand pull through based on the orders and we had over 100,000 orders at the end of the quarter and that's grown since then in our order bank That played well for us in the Q3. Speaker 300:25:20139,004 orders Speaker 400:25:22as of today. As of today. Not to be exact. Speaker 600:25:26It sounds like you're on that. And maybe if I could sneak one in just on cap allocation real quick on the dividend. I mean, why now? And I'll hop back in the queue. Speaker 700:25:35Yes. Speaker 400:25:37It's the underlying strength of the business, John. And we're not capital constrained. We're able to fund our initiatives for growth. We know that there are going to be other opportunities that surface. We're confident that we can fund those. Speaker 400:25:52And We're focused on total shareholder returns, not only stock appreciation, but also the dividend. And so given the strength of the business, The Board elected that we would restart the dividend this quarter. Speaker 600:26:05Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:26:09Your next question comes from the line of Dan Levy with Credit Suisse. Speaker 800:26:15Hey, good evening. Thank you for taking the question. Speaker 100:26:21I'd first just like Speaker 800:26:21to ask a question on the shape of Recovery in volumes. A, is this magnesium shortage going to cause any term any sort of to near term supply disruption for you. I mean, we heard some Draconian comments that I could just outright stop European production. And just maybe you can give us a sense broadly of to. How you anticipate the shape of recovery in terms of volumes? Speaker 800:26:47At what point do we get or is your baseline expectation That the chip shortage is fully mitigated and that you can be back at full run rate production. Speaker 400:26:57Yes. So from the magnesium standpoint, when we look at that, we are seeing price pressure on aluminum broadly. We saw that all year and probably see a little bit more price pressure due to the magnesium issue. But Our sheet metal suppliers, our sheet aluminum suppliers don't purchase magnesium from China for North American production. So we don't see that having any significant impact or any impact on us. Speaker 400:27:24We do see the chip issue continuing to run through 'twenty two. As we said, it's very dynamic. Right now, you ask us what we think the sequential increase in supply will be year over year. We think we'll to about 10% more, but that's changing weekly. And we're doing everything we can to get our hands on as many chips as we can. Speaker 400:27:44But we do see that running through 2022. It could extend into 2023, although we do anticipate the scope and severity of that to reduce as we move through 'twenty two into 'twenty three. Speaker 800:27:57Great. Thank you. Second question, I'd like to zoom out just a bit more strategic. I think if we just look at the pace of progress at Ford, just both financially and in terms of EV, AV, helping digital, What we're seeing today is it's far greater than what we saw 12 or 18 months ago, which is actually pretty impressive given large organizations, it takes Time to really affect change. Speaker 700:28:23So I just want to Speaker 800:28:24I'm trying to understand how much of what we're seeing today was something that was always there and to Just always starting to come to the surface now. You're sort of getting the fruits of prior initiatives. Or has something fundamentally changed in the past 12, 18 months. What does this tell us about the pace of change at Fortive and Exelteries? And maybe just to be a bit more specific, because I know you can take that in a number of ways. Speaker 800:28:48Maybe you could answer that specifically to what we're seeing on product and planning on the business transition to EV. Speaker 300:28:59Thank you for your question. A lot of the product we've been working on for several years, we made the tough choices. I would say the answer is we have a plan. It's not an advertising or PR tagline. It's our plan. Speaker 300:29:18Everyone in the company knows what we have to do. We are out of time and we have focus. We need to get an 8% margin like we did this quarter as a company regularly because we have to fund a high growth dev and digital business. It's not to make more money. Yes, it is that. Speaker 300:29:40But it's motivated in the mission of transforming forward through these digital products. So running the ICE business for cash, Getting serious about our cost, our quality, our launches, our 8% return, it's all a mission And the team knows the plan. And I think the culture is starting to change to be quicker, more accountability, less bureaucracy and that mission Permeates through the company. I'm probably the worst person to ask whether something's changed because it sure has changed for me and my leadership team. But to me the proof is in the pudding like our Q3. Speaker 300:30:34And to whether we've really changed as a company will be proven out in our numbers over time like they have the last year. Speaker 800:30:47And just to be more specific on the product front, because I think we're seeing a much faster pace of product. Is the time of development products, like how much have you accelerated that? Meaning, typically in the past, we were here of 3.5 to 4 years of to a drawing board to product and showroom. Is there a new normal for what that is? Speaker 300:31:09If we make up our mind and we come together as a Seemed like we did on Maverick, it could be just 2 years. We did we knocked 20 months off the Maverick development, but it required the leadership team to not have the hand ringing on the studio for 6 months like we normally did. I think that's a new proof point. But the question I ask myself is a little different. When we see a technology change like this, like Bev, it's not just the speed of your product creation, It's can you be flexible and agile on your industrial system like in manufacturing. Speaker 300:31:51We have 3 complete hits on our hands. A Mach E with 200,000 units of demand. That's we have the lightning with over 160,000 orders And the etrans is completely sold out. So how I like to think about it, it's not just the product creation speeding up, it's whole company. And we have to do our job to break constraints now, so that we can deliver 100 of 1000 of battery electrics next year. Speaker 300:32:20That to me is the proof of our change, not just how fast the product creation process works. Speaker 800:32:29Great. Thank you very much. Very helpful. Operator00:32:33Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Brinkman with JPMorgan. Speaker 900:32:38Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I thought to ask a few on the order bank, just given the commentary that it grew 50% sequentially in 3Q excluding the Bronco. So Can you talk about the benefits of the order bank? How it helps to optimize your operations? Speaker 900:32:52And what kind of pricing or other trends you might be seeing with regard to the order bank? And then How much of the increase in orders do you think may stem from the currently very strong new product cadence or from the currently to low inventory environment and what avenues are there available to drive orders as industry conditions eventually normalize? Speaker 300:33:15To. Thank you so much for your question. I'll ask John to comment. From my view, the order bank A model that we're going to in North America that we're in right now has benefits across the patch. We are an incredibly complicated company. Speaker 300:33:33And so having an order bank allows us to push simplification into the order that the customer facing Options, which we need to do and it reduces cost and improves our quality. Number 2, to the operator. It eliminates the need for expensive conquest fixed marketing. Number 3, it's incredibly helpful for industrial system. You cannot imagine, Ryan, how much money we waste by guessing what our launch mix is for a new product. Speaker 300:34:05When you have a Order Bank, especially for new models, you could capacitize the high series mix that are very profitable, right in line with customer demand. So it's incredibly cost effective And it allows you to address the long tail revenues that we have lost in the past because of our ground stock model. And the last one is, it's lower cost. There's less parts hanging around. We can manage our industrial system and our manufacturing in a leaner way. Speaker 300:34:41The question really is how we maintain it, as you said, as the market improves. And the way we're looking at that Not just having a day supply target in the past that we've managed, But actually putting in the infrastructure to maintain or prefer a order based to the system. That means we train our system to put in orders. We reward people for putting in orders. We dynamically price for customers, so that they're incentivized to keep ordering versus buying off the lot. Speaker 300:35:21So it's going to be a journey. It's been a very rewarding one so far, and we're just beginning. This is the model we have to go through as most of our business or Majority of our business goes battery electric and digital. It's the right loyalty model. Speaker 200:35:38Okay, great. Thanks. And then just as Speaker 900:35:40a quick follow-up to that, it It seems as what was discussed earlier that product development times are speeding up, maybe particularly with regard to EVs. The lightning, for example, seems to come together very fast. Another trend seems to be that automakers are revealing their EVs for a longer period of time before the the actual start of production, maybe because they're so eager to show them, consumers are so clamoring for them. Does that mean that you think that Order banks and ordering in advance might be even more popular with electric vehicles. What are you seeing with regards to that? Speaker 300:36:17The move to a digital product means we have to go to 100% loyalty model. So, the reason why you're seeing us to launch battery electrics early is very simple. It's our Super Bowl ad. Our new Super Bowl ad, our new Detroit Motor Show is our reveal, Because it starts the clock on reservations and you have to do it early enough so your industrial system gets informed by the results of your reservation. That's the closed loop that has to happen. Speaker 300:36:46We need to open it early enough so that our industrial system can react to the orders We don't waste money and take advantage of long tail revenue. And it's a more controlled environment than to Broadcast Media Advertising on the Super Bowl. Speaker 900:37:06Very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:37:11Your next question comes from the line of Rod Lachey with Wolfe Research. Speaker 1000:37:18Hi, everybody. I have just two questions. So first, you've got a lot of The growth that you're targeting in Bez and Digital Businesses, so it's not surprising that we would see some structural cost inflation. What we're seeing right now is actually really benign. It's $200,000,000 in the quarter considering what you've got going on. Speaker 1000:37:40But maybe can you talk a little bit about to how we should think about the feathering in of those additional structural costs, which presumably come in ahead of the revenue. So how should we think about that as to look out to the next year or 2. Speaker 400:37:57Yes, Rod. We'll start to see those come in as we get into 'twenty two And then they'll feather in through 'twenty three as we continue to ramp our investments in our plan, our priorities, not only in the products, the bevs, but also as we're building out our customer facing technologies, our connectivity, etcetera. So Yes. You'll see that start to come in on a year over year basis next year and it will continue into 'twenty three. Speaker 1000:38:28Can you just give us any Sort of brackets around what I mean, you did mention that 25% of the EV spending will be expensed, but any sort of On the magnitude of that, what that headwind Speaker 400:38:41is? I'm not ready to do that today for 2022 and going in through 'twenty three. We're completely targeted on getting to that 8% in 2023, so we'll manage it within But today, I'm not ready to talk in that level of detail about. Speaker 1000:39:02Okay. And I was a little surprised about the comment about just 10% volume growth for next year. It seemed to me like the Renaissance fire in Texas storms alone might have knocked 200,000 units off of your production in Q2. And it wasn't too long ago that you guys were routinely doing over 700,000 units quarter. So, do you have any thoughts that you might be able to share about when would you be able to get back up to that kind of a level to production and if so, when should we expect that to happen? Speaker 400:39:41Right. So I think what you'll find is that As you look through 2022, the first half will have less supply than through the second half. And as I said earlier, we see this Mitigating over time, it may extend into 2023, but I would say that we should be back up and running based on what we're seeing today run rate the end of next year into 2023. And then in 2023, we'd start to rebuild our inventories. But it's dynamic, Rod, and it's hard to make a pinpoint call at this point in time. Speaker 400:40:16But we wanted to share with you what we're seeing is that we're seeing about 10% for next year. Speaker 200:40:22And Speaker 400:40:22we see that the chips constraints going to still hit us. It's It's going to still be a factor next year. So we have to keep managing as we are this year. Speaker 1000:40:30Got it. Okay. Thank you. Operator00:40:34Your next question comes from the line of Brian Johnson with Barclays. Speaker 1100:40:40Two questions. First a quick, Not quite housekeeping, but definitely balance sheet's question. As you restated the dividend at the level, Yes. Just could you maybe talk us through the investment grade rating implications and timeline to get there That you and the Board considered when sending that. Speaker 400:41:04So we're going to continue to work and focus on Improving our business, right? Our target is to have an investment grade balance sheet, but that's going to come by improving the business and you're seeing the strength of that come through. And so that's what we're focused on. What the rating agencies decide to do with our rating, Bell managed that, that's up to them. What we're laser focused on is improving the run rate of the business, improving our performance, improving our overall metrics and you. Speaker 400:41:34Eventually, the rating agencies and the ratings will take care of themselves. Speaker 1100:41:38Okay. Second question. As you think about that 10% volume increase, rough guidance, a couple of things. 1, you. Where do you see fleet sales coming back as you kind of bring that up? Speaker 1100:41:56And second, are you going to take a different attitude towards fleet sales than in Ford of the past. I remember Don Leclair saying he had 2 factories making Tauruses and rental car companies were about the only buyers of that. And so, but there's also really rental cars, but Maybe some of the government business that's not police is not quite the same. And kind of related to that, as you kind of think about prioritizing production, Are there models where you're more comfortable, you'll get good price retention? And other models, and I'm going to pick on like to the Escape maybe that have a lot of competition in their segment and as capacity comes back less likely to hold price, Same compared to a Bronco. Speaker 400:42:46So it's interesting because I remember those days when Don probably made that comment about rental fleets and that they were low margin, etcetera. I think what you're finding is business Models are changing and the fleet business is evolving just like everything else in our industry. And we see that there could potentially be a positive fleet business where to make good money. And so we're not going to shy away from that if we speak that it's right for our brand and we think it's right for the bottom line. And so we're going to continue to look at fleets differently. Speaker 400:43:26We're going to continue to think about vehicles as a service and what that potential holds for us as that business model changes. And we'll see where that takes us. But we're not going to go back to the times where we're putting in capacity, we're pumping out Unit selling them at little to no margin for rental cars. That's not going to happen again. Speaker 200:43:49To. I'm Speaker 300:43:50sorry. It's okay. I was just going to say our fleet business now, now that we've rationalized the company, Our fleet business is very strategic for us. It's also very profitable. It certainly varies in Europe and North America and China. Speaker 300:44:08Different fleet segments have different profitability. The one thing I would ask you to think about is that to. Most of the fleet that matters at Ford is commercial vehicles. And the most important commercial vehicles for us is small, medium sized businesses. And those are very profitable business for us, for transit, for Super Duty. Speaker 300:44:32That's where Ford excels in the fleet business And it's smaller fleets, it's not big fleet sales. So the texture of this is that we're revenue to managing the company very carefully. We know the margins by geography, even within the country, and we know by distribution channel. So this is a very thoughtful approach for us. But strategically, especially because of the Pro business and its profitability, We want to make sure we have we're a reliable partner with fleet customers. Speaker 300:45:09They do business with companies That are reliable. They don't come in and out of the market. They do business with companies that have a full range of products, a full range of services. That's why Marion is investing in Ford Pro and why we're vertically integrating our services. So I think we have a really good to the profitable fleet business around the world. Speaker 300:45:33We look at the margins very carefully, but it's strategically very important for the company To be a reliable partner. Speaker 1100:45:43Okay. And in terms of price retention and how that's going to vary across your product line? Speaker 300:45:52Well, John, I think you should answer that one in terms of to how we revenue manage in a constrained environment. Speaker 400:46:02Yes. So as you would expect, We're very conscientious about the dynamic of the supply and demand and the impact that has on the pricing. And we look at this on a daily basis, managing our incentives, looking at if we should be taking top line pricing given the inflationary pressures we're seeing. And as we talked about, to the very pressures we're seeing. And as we talked about, we're not going to go back to the old habits of loading up the dealers with stock and then looking for the push through of for sales. Speaker 400:46:36We're going to focus more on orders coming through online, specific orders to customers being satisfied, understanding what their demands are, simplifying the system. And with all of that, we expect to retain quite a bit of the price. Now will it mitigate as we go through next year as supply and demand comes more in balance and into 'twenty three? Yes. But our job is going to be to manage that and retain as much pricing as we can and while providing customers good value for those products. Speaker 400:47:08So It's something that we look at very closely on a daily basis. Speaker 300:47:14Thank you. In the Escape business, We now have another player called Bronco Sport in the segment. It's incredibly profitable and people really appreciate the product. We are not in the business of commodity products in that segment anymore. We've changed. Speaker 300:47:31We made an investment several years ago. Speaker 1100:47:34Right. Operator00:47:39Your next question comes from the line of Colin Langan with Wells Fargo. Speaker 1200:47:45Great. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to clarify, I thought your original guidance was that the first the second half was supposed to be up in volume 30%. I mean, I'm not sure if I'm misreading it. It sounds like Q3 may be up a bit from Q4. Speaker 1200:48:00So is that 30% still not accurate? Obviously, it's kind of important when you think to 10% of the 2022 what base you're going off of? Speaker 400:48:07Yes. Colin, that's a great question. Thank you. Now we did say last quarter that we expected the second half to be up about 30%. Looks like it's going to be up somewhere around 15%. Speaker 400:48:20And so what you're seeing flow through is the strength we had in the quarter relative to the top line and other actions that we took relative to cost, etcetera. So when you look at that walk, that bridge between Q3 to Q4, we expect market factors to be positive. We said we think Going to be up sequentially about 10%. We also see a little bit stronger mix continuing. And then of course you'll have some product related costs, production related costs associated with that, but net net, market factors net of those costs to produce The increased volumes is going to be positive. Speaker 400:48:57What we're seeing from a headwind standpoint, if you look at Q3 to Q4, are commodities. We expect that on a quarter over quarter basis, they're going to be up about $700,000,000 And if you look at that So far, year to date, we've seen about $1,600,000,000 of commodities hit us. And when you get to the Q4 and you get the cumulative effect On a year over year basis, commodities are going to be up about another $1,500,000,000 in the 4th quarter. So year over year up $1,500,000,000 sequentially Up $700,000,000 And then we are going to see some higher warranty costs on a sequential basis in the Q4 for to things that we have to take care of around extended warranties and a little bit higher coverages. But again, on a year over year basis, Our warranty will improve in the Q4 and full year on a year over year basis. Speaker 400:49:51Our warranty, we expect to be good by about 1,400,000,000. Speaker 1200:49:56Got it. Well, that's very helpful. Speaker 400:49:58Does that help you with the bridge? Speaker 1200:50:01Yes. No, that's great. Just secondly, in terms of the redesign plan, it's been out for a while. Is India the last major step? I mean, is this going to sort of Is this it? Speaker 1200:50:13So maybe next quarter, maybe the last time we see these slides? Just kind of curious or is there more still coming? Speaker 300:50:20Well, I think we're in good shape for now. Obviously, the acceleration of the bed business and our ice assets will be, I think, you the next big transition for the whole industry, not just Ford. But Ford specifically, India's you to really the principal region country where we have struggled over time. And It's really great to see the progress the team is making in India and the very vibrant position we'll now have with the new lineup. And I'd just like to highlight the progress in South America for this quarter. Speaker 300:51:00John, when's the last time we were profitable in South America. Speaker 400:51:05I believe it was 2013. Speaker 300:51:08So let's hang that in the air for a second, 2013. Operator00:51:20Your next question comes from the line of Joseph Spak with RBC. Speaker 1300:51:27Thank you. Maybe just one quick one on the free cash guidance, which I think you maintained despite the EBIT guidance going higher. So is there something going on with working capital or something? Because you're saying you're releasing more vehicles. I would think that would actually be a positive factor in the Q4 as well. Speaker 1300:51:48So I'm curious what the offset is. Speaker 400:51:51Yes. So what we're seeing there is that We've got the EBIT coming in right, that improvement, but the less favorable improvement in working capital and timing differences is hitting us in the quarter because we have lower than anticipated volume in the back half of the quarter due to the chip constraints and so we get hit with that working capital at the end of the year. So that's what's happening to us on the free cash flow. So it's a timing issue. Speaker 1300:52:19Okay. And then, you. I want to go back to some of the announcements you've made over the past couple of months. And I know you talked again about the spend today and you're not spending more than $30,000,000,000 and I appreciate the breakdown you gave of sort of How you're spending that? Maybe this is just me, but I actually find it still fairly difficult to track what exactly you're spending over the coming years because I believe some of that has already been spent. Speaker 1300:52:55So is it possible to Maybe just say like of that $30,000,000,000 what's being spent like starting next year through the middle of the decade? Speaker 400:53:05So of the $30,000,000,000 when you look at the cap, very little we said about half of that was cap, Very little of that has been spent through 2021 relative to the $15,000,000,000 about half of it. Of course, you're going to see the expense front loaded because that's primarily the engineering that we have in developing the battery electric vehicles. And then the direct investment, which is about 25% of it, that's for things like the vertical integration of the JVs and those types of things. And you Saw those announcements this quarter with our plan in Blue Oval SK, the battery plant. So that's how we're going To unfold that bev spending over time. Speaker 1300:53:51Okay. That's helpful. I appreciate it. Operator00:53:57Your next question comes from the line of Itay Michaeli with Citi. Speaker 500:54:03Great. Thanks. Good evening, everybody. Just two quick ones for me. First, is there any update on the Blue Cruise deployment, including through OTA, maybe some initial customer feedback? Speaker 300:54:15Great. Thank you. We're shipping with Mach E F Series now Blue Cruise as they leave the factory, And we're going to be OTA ing BlueCooz in the Q1. We wanted to improve the customer experience. So We pushed it back in terms of an OTA, because we wanted to be much simpler for the customer than was originally planned. Speaker 300:54:40And that takes a little planning to consolidate. Often these Level 2 systems require multiple updates to the car. We want it to be very simple. That took a little bit more work on our team's part. And so, it's available As we ship products now and as an OTA, it will be in the Q1 and it will be a lot simpler to use and get that OTA and update for the customer than it was originally planned. Speaker 300:55:11Does that answer your question? Speaker 500:55:13Yes. Thank you, Jim. That's very, very helpful. And then maybe just a super quick follow-up, just a point of clarification. Thank you for the 2022 initial indications. Speaker 500:55:21To. At least it mentions you expect to build on the strong performance in 2021. I'm just curious if we should interpret that as you expect to grow EBIT adjusted year over year in 2022. Speaker 400:55:36Yes. So we're not going to give a number at this point in time. But What we're saying is that the strength of our new product lineup, our high volume nameplates like in the strength of what we're seeing from Mach E, as Jim said, we think there's about Demand for 200,000 units. We've got the Bronco, Maverick, E Transit, F-one hundred and fifty Lightning are coming. It's the best lineup we've had. Speaker 400:55:57And so that's going to be a tailwind for us For sure as we go into next year. And you're seeing that come through this year. And we're going to build on that. But we're also going to have to manage The headwinds that we've talked about and the other puts and takes. But what we can tell you is we are laser focused I'm getting to the 8% target in 2023. Speaker 400:56:18And so we will manage into next year. These are the types of things we're seeing from a puts and takes standpoint, to the strength, the tailwinds and then the headwinds and we will manage that next year and we'll be on the path next year towards our 8% target in 2020. Speaker 500:56:33Great. That's super helpful. Thank you. Operator00:56:38Your next question comes from the line of Emmanuel Rosner with Deutsche Bank. Speaker 700:56:45Thank you very much and good evening. Two questions, please. Hi. Two questions. The first one, to Very pleased to see Beyond targets and for the 8% margins by 2023, to a big focus of the company and clearly showing some progress there. Speaker 700:57:08How should we think about the impact on this from to the margins on your electric vehicles. Obviously, the scale takes some time to build up, but you're going through that right now And probably have some level of visibility. So what's your latest thinking around trajectory for margins on some of your BEVs? And to what extent you will or will not impact overall company margins and potentially how to think about it beyond 2023. Speaker 300:57:43Thanks. Such an important question for the company. I'd like John to comment on the margins. Right now, we have to 3 high volume, very well accepted battery electric vehicles on our hands, Mach E, E Transit and the F-one hundred and fifty Lightning. So the way we look at it is We want to grow this business really fast. Speaker 300:58:09Just the Mach E demand itself, we think is 200,000 units. That does not include the Lightning Or the etransit. So our first job is, of course, post job 1 customer experience improvement, to post job 1 simplification and improvement of the cost of the vehicle and post job 1 quality improvements using the data off the vehicles. Perhaps our biggest job, in my opinion, is to break the constraints we have in manufacturing and our supply chain, So we can get these products out to these customers. And that post job 1 orientation is quite different than to how we historically looked at the ICE business where we wait to a minor change or something later to make those changes. Speaker 300:59:00The constraint for Mach E right now is batteries. We think we can break some of those constraints by working creatively with our China team and get batteries from China. So stay tuned and I'll ask John to comment on the margins. Speaker 400:59:16Right. Well, as we talked about last quarter, Mach E is EBIT profitable today. But you. We also know that the margins are not as strong as our ICE margins. And so we're working on that. Speaker 400:59:29Over time, we expect as we scale, as you said, And as the technology costs come down, we will grow those margins. And ultimately, we do expect with these connected vehicles, These connected beds that the profit margins will be better than what we're seeing on ice today, but that's over time. Speaker 700:59:51Thank you. And then my second question was on Argo. So very encouraged to see that You would like to encourage them as supportive of accessing the public markets. How do you envisage the future relationship between Forward and Argo to be how important is that going to be as part of your overall business model? Speaker 301:00:14To mission critical. For us to truly disrupt personal ownership, we have to democratize shared mobility And the self driving and mobility in the driven world are absolutely mission critical for the company to disrupt itself. I am really proud of the team's progress. It's different than our competitors in the space. We've gone to the most difficult miles in 4, 5 different cities. Speaker 301:00:48To our mapping, our SDS deployment and the algorithms are built to be scaled So we're not going to a small market area in easy miles like others. We're taking on the toughest problems now and building our capability for scaling quickly. And I think that's always been our approach. The relationship with Argo and us and Volkswagen is very close. But we do see us moving into more of a production mode now. Speaker 301:01:28And we're really ready for that. And we think this will take more capital and a little more time, and we think the access to public capital It's really mission critical for our journey. Speaker 701:01:43Thank you. Operator01:01:46Your final question comes from the line of Adam Jonas with Morgan Stanley. Speaker 201:02:09I think explained as lucidly and clearly the always on and the Ford Pro stuff The way you have, right. So you get kudos for that. To. You're seeing some of your competitors make some cyclical investments in the downstream to make kind of for that customer experience. Volkswagen buying your car And some startups including ones that you know pretty well kind of owning that physical part of it. Speaker 201:02:40Is there any to Gap in your strategy as you go always on and really the full service. Is there anything that you want to vertically integrate to under the Ford you. You know umbrella order is working with the franchises and the 3rd parties sufficient given this big change in this model? Thanks. Speaker 301:03:04Great question. Our philosophy is different. We think partnership on the demand layer for autonomy and pre autonomy is mission critical for our always on strategy. Are there pieces missing that we're working really hard on? You bet you. Speaker 301:03:24We're not going to talk about them today though. Speaker 201:03:28All right. Then just a follow-up from me and your dealers. They're crushing it. So I think we'll say they're gouging. That might be unfair because they're paying high prices too for their vehicles. Speaker 201:03:40But we're starting to see 4 handle, 5 handle, to 6 handle GPUs, really big chunk of the price of a car, Jim. At the risk of selling, do you think they're making too much? Because I know that's a gotcha question. Do you think there's fallout that you can capture to the Consumer. Speaker 301:04:07Well, this is also really important. First of all, I would say the heart and soul of Ford's strategy is our commercial business. In that business where vehicles are highly utilized, Our dealer network is one of our most important advantages versus the new competitors. I'll give you some statistics. We have 6 to 50 dedicated commercial, mostly service centers in the United States and 850 to transit centers across Europe. Speaker 301:04:38That will take a lot of time and a lot of money for someone to recreate. Every one of those dealers Speaker 701:04:44to This Speaker 301:04:44has multiple bodybuilders that can call designed for those trades And those vacations for our Ford vehicles. So the dealer body is not only important for to the after sales experience and making sure those vehicles can be serviced, but it's also mission critical for the outfit of those products. To So the dealer network is absolutely strategically critical for our leadership And maintaining that as we go to digital connected vehicles for our commercial customers. There's no doubt that many customers 1 is 3 or 4 clicks, very easy service experience on the retail side, and we're working really carefully on that, Including a simple e commerce platform. And actually in China, our bed business already has 25 direct stores by the end of this year. Speaker 301:05:43So we're starting to experiment. I think our dealers have served us really well. I'm very proud of them. I'm especially proud of our commercial dealer and we are very vigilant. You can imagine, I get lots of e mails every day about transaction prices from customers on our hottest products. Speaker 301:06:03And we all feel obligated to represent the brand professionally Speaker 801:06:16to the operator. Operator01:06:16This concludes the Ford Motor Company Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by