How the Auto Bailout Is Punishing Ford

November 2, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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Ford Motor Co.’s latest earnings report doesn’t mention General Motors or Chrysler, its crosstown rivals. But those competitors have a lot to do with Ford’s surprising $1 billion profit in the third quarter.

Ford attributes its better-than-expected performance—its first quarterly profit since 2005—to aggressive cost-cutting, popular new products like the Taurus sedan and Fusion hybrid, a cash-for-clunkers bump, and improvements at its financing arm. But Ford also is a clear beneficiary of the woes at GM and Chrysler, both trying to recover after bankruptcy filings earlier this year. Ford cited a market share gain of 2.2 percentage points compared with 2008, which helped offset a shrinking market. For a mature industry like the car business, that’s a huge gain in a short period of time. And there’s little doubt that many of Ford’s new customers bailed on the other two domestic automakers as they shambled toward bankruptcy and wolfed down billions in taxpayers bailouts.

[See what GM’s recent progress report fails to mention.]

But the GM and Chrysler bailouts also are holding Ford back, which prompts some capitalistic what-if questions. For years, there was too much capacity in the U.S. auto industry, with a reckoning on the horizon: Too many manufacturers built more cars than Americans really wanted, forcing deep price cuts to move the metal. That caused the most pain for the weakest automakers, which turned out to be GM and Chrysler. As the recession hit in 2008, free-market forces intensified, forcing the two domestics to hemorrhage cash. Ford wasn’t far behind, and some analysts expected Ford to line up for a bailout too. But by either luck or foresight, Ford had done some financial maneuvering in prior years that allowed it to survive the bloodletting without government aid.

If the government had let GM and Chrysler fail, about 30 percent of the U.S. auto market would have been up for grabs. Ford's 2.2 percentage-point gain in market share could easily have been 5 or 10 points, with other automakers picking up sizeable share as well. The outcome, however, would have been chaotic, because GM in particular is so big that its demise would have sunk suppliers that the whole industry needs to survive, and the collateral damage would have hit every automaker. That made it indefensible to let two of the nation’s three automakers collapse in the midst of an economic meltdown.

But letting Chrysler fail alone was more plausible. Chrysler was in even worse shape than GM, with few compelling products, little in the pipeline, and a poor reputation for quality. It was also smaller, with about 9 percent of the U.S. car market, less than half GM’s share. Steve Rattner, who ran President Obama’s automotive task force, wrote recently that the Obama administration was split nearly 50-50 on whether to save Chrysler. A last-minute study showing that a Chrysler liquidation could lead to 300,000 lost jobs tipped the balance in favor of a bailout.

[See why stocks are surging as jobs disappear.]

But those 300,000 jobs remain attached to a company that’s still extremely weak and has an uncertain future. Chrysler could still fail if its forced marriage with Fiat doesn't produce fresh cars Americans want to buy, and soon. Government-aided bankruptcy, meanwhile, has helped GM and Chrysler shed debt and lower costs—putting Ford at a disadvantage. Ford says it needs additional concessions from its unions, such as a no-strike clause, in order to match the concessions GM and Chrysler were able to get through bankruptcy reorganization. But the unions seem likely to resist now that Ford is making a few bucks.

So the one domestic automaker that has paid its own freight could end up penalized for its success, while the government indefinitely subsidizes competitors that would have died without government aid. Without the GM and Chrysler bailouts, there would be a vast surplus of unemployed autoworkers. But since the government saved thousands of jobs, the unions have more bargaining power, which they seem poised to use against a company that has stayed off the federal dole.

[See 7 ways to survive the jobless recovery.]

Don't expect to hear Ford complain about this, since company executives know that if the timing had been different, they could be the ones with Chapter 11 on their résumés. And Ford needs to right-size its operations, not execute a hasty surge in capacity that could undo years of cost-cutting.

But the domestic auto industry is still a mess, and the huge subsidies at Chrysler and GM could inhibit an overall return to profitability rather than accelerate it. The same dynamics are at play in the banking industry, where bailed-out giants like Citigroup, GMAC, and Bank of America are sitting on billions in reserves that healthier banks would be able to lend, stimulating a recovery. In the investment banking business, by contrast, the demise of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers has left survivors like JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs nicely profitable, which—like it or not—has to happen if the overall economy is going to get healthy again. It's awful to watch companies fail and jobs disappear. But the alternative, we seem to be learning, is to watch them fail in slow motion, while contaminating those with the best chance to succeed.

Tags:
Detroit,
car manufacturers,
Ford

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Everybody has to remember that Bill clinton when he was president decided to bring in this free trade agreement to the foreign companies that in return 10 years later put every american automotive company in a bind. George bush didnt help either and Obama is just making everything else worse. With the oil companies raising prices on fuel for no reason since we have so much on reserve and stock, maybe we could afford new cars and the fuel to put in them. Then maybe gm and chrysler wouldnt need a bailout or have to do layoffs. Maybe the low class and middle class workers need to teach these excutives and oil presidents a lesson and put them out on the streets with no money and car and see how they survive.

Blue collar worker of TX 11:11PM January 30, 2010

Okay we all have our thoughts about ford and gm and what not I am the owner of a 1999 pontiac grandam se 4 door 124,000 miles on it currently that was given to me by a family member... Before that I owned a 1994 ford escort station wagon which I still own and amazed its still running! with no major engine work it has over 300,000 miles on it... It still runs great! but I have also owned a dodge caravan and A jaguar. on my pontiac when I got it I thought everything was taken care of not true the spark plugs were original from the factory the fuel filter factory and battery factory and it ran for 10 YEARS! withought any of it being changed It still runs but when I found out that it hadnt been changed I opned that baby up and changed it I done it myself not that hard but the manual in the thing was all i needed.... It runs brandnew!I have not had any trouble wih the fords or pontiac which i am sad to see goo. But my thing is its not the car companys really its the cars themselves.. the way they are treated and they way they are driven I say lets keep gm and ford american and get rid of the foreign cars! thats why gm needed the bail out. Another reason why alot of them needed the bail out was because people still had a great running car from these companys and did not see the need to buy new but its the car companys fault because they built more than what there was a demand for! What happned to the days when a person wanted to buy a new car they had to order it had it made and then delivered... Now there is just such a surplus which lead to debt!

scott of FL 3:26PM January 30, 2010

Ford is the oldest of the three brands and it was the last man standing.

I grew up riding in Colony Park station wagons (with fake wood side panels). We have a 2001 Mustang and a 2003 Focus in the driveway now.

I have owned Honda, Toyota, Oldsmobile, Buick, Chevy, Volvo and Dodge vehicles. A lot of them were fun new. Honda was especially disappointing with the fragile body panels and fast wearing interior fabric. The power windows on the Chevys broke frequently. The Dodge cars were good for about 40K miles between serious mechanical problems/being stranded on the roadside again. The Buick and Oldsmobile cars were very good to me.

It was hard to see Oldsmobile go. I don't care about Saturn. Pontiac has such a serious brand identity problem that killing it is smart. Hummer has the same problem.

In the end Ford won. Toyota is taking a huge beating that will impact all of the Japanese car brands to some degree. Toyota is not too good to fail. Honda makes lemon cars too.

The big difference between Honda and Ford is this: Ford cares what each customer experiences after purchasing their cars. Look at the paint on a 15 year old Mustang next to an Accord of the same vintage. Yeah, the Accord looks like an old snot rag with peeling clear coat and white faded splotches everywhere. The Mustang will still take a polish and shine in the sun.

I will keep buying Ford and Ford only because they make Mustangs, their cars hold up well over time, and they are priced competitively. Much as I would love to see Ford take 100% market share its not right for the country.

Somehow we have to do better than the UK did with DeLorean. Perhaps we can accelerate development of alternative fuel vehicles with control over the car companies. It would be the right thing to do.

Yeah, if you take the last decade as a litmus test then Ford is soon to be the only US car maker.

Ford works for me of CA 3:17AM January 30, 2010

Rick Newman

Rick Newman

The global economy is mysterious, even scary. Chief Business Correspondent Rick Newman connects the dots. In addition to his writing for U.S. News, Rick is the co-author of two books: Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11, and Bury Us Upside Down: The Misty Pilots and the Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail.


Read Rick's latest blog entries here.

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