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However, Ford went 0 for 2 on Wednesday as an old enemy in warranty expenses returned to bite the Blue Oval. And it's an even more unfortunate setback because Ford management said on its April earnings call that the company has made "real progress" on its goal of making better vehicles. The best story at Ford remains Ford Pro , the unit that houses the company's fleet and commercial vehicles. But last quarter management said the business was tracking toward the higher end of the range, and that no longer appears to be the case. The new Ford F-150 truck goes through the assembly line at the Ford Dearborn Plant on April 11, 2024 in Dearborn, Michigan.
Persons: FactSet ., Motors, Ford, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas —, JD Power's, It's, Jim Farley, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Bill Pugliano Organizations: Ford, LSEG, FactSet, General Motors, Tesla, Ford Model, Revenue, Ford Pro, Super Duty, CNBC, Ford Dearborn Plant, Getty Locations: Ford, management's, Dearborn , Michigan
The Ford display at the New York International Auto Show on March 28, 2024. DETROIT — Ford Motor is set to report second-quarter earnings after the markets close Wednesday. Ford's second-quarter results last year included $42.43 billion in revenue; net income of $1.92 billion, or 47 cents per share; and adjusted earnings before interest and taxes, or EBIT, of $3.79 billion. Ford's guidance for the year includes adjusted EBIT of between $10 billion and $12 billion and free cash flow of $6.5 billion to $7.5 billion. Ford's stock is up about 15% this year, as pricing in the automotive industry has remained more resilient than expected.
Organizations: New York, DETROIT, Detroit, Motors, Ford Locations: Canadian
Wednesday, July 24, 2024: Cramer says wait for the downside to get into this mega-cap techJim and Jeff discuss the earnings report from this mega-cap tech stock. They also discuss their expectations from this automaker's earnings. Finally, they break down the moves in these consumer staples.
Persons: Cramer, Jeff
A GMC pickup truck is displayed for sale on a lot at a General Motors dealership in Austin, Texas, on Jan. 5, 2023. DETROIT — General Motors is set to report second-quarter results before the bell Tuesday. Here is what analysts expect, according to average estimates compiled by LSEG:Earnings per share: $2.75 adjusted$2.75 adjusted Revenue: $45.46 billionThose results would mark a 1.6% increase in revenue compared to a year earlier and a 44.2% increase in adjusted earnings per share. GM's second-quarter results last year included $44.75 billion in revenue, net income attributable to stockholders of $2.57 billion and adjusted earnings before interest and taxes of $3.23 billion. GM's 2024 guidance includes adjusted earnings of $12.5 billion to $14.5 billion, or $9 to $10 a share, and adjusted automotive free cash flow in a range of $8.5 billion to $10.5 billion.
Organizations: GMC, General Motors, DETROIT —, Street, GM, Detroit, America's Locations: Austin , Texas, DETROIT, China
Tesla shareholders really want the company to release new vehicles. Elon Musk has teased a variety of new EVs, but it is unclear when they will be released. AdvertisementTesla shareholders want Elon Musk to roll out new vehicles. Retail investors are submitting questions in an anonymous Q&A forum for Elon Musk and other executives to answer in Tuesday's earnings call, and many of them are asking when Tesla plans to release new EVs. One shareholder requested updates on the status of a revamped Tesla Roadster, which Musk has teased will be a SpaceX-Tesla collaboration complete with rocket tech.
Persons: Q, Elon Musk, , Elon, Tesla, Musk Organizations: Service, Elon, Tesla Roadster, SpaceX
GM slows its EV plans again even as sales grow
  + stars: | 2024-07-23 | by ( Michael Wayland | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Barra's comments come a week after she raised concerns about GM hitting its North American EV production capacity target. The entire Buick brand has targeted being fully electric by 2030, as part of GM's plans to exclusively offer consumer EVs by 2035. GM previously announced plans for four of the multibillion-dollar plants in the U.S. by 2026. Barra on Tuesday said the company would grow cell production in a "meaningful cadence." GM CFO Paul Jacobson declined to discuss potential plans to delay or cancel the automaker's future EV battery cell plants, aside from the two facilities making cells in Ohio and Tennessee.
Persons: Motors, Mary Barra, Barra, Paul Jacobson, " Jacobson, EVs, Jacobson Organizations: DETROIT –, Buick, GM, American, Detroit, LG Energy, EV Locations: Detroit, DETROIT, U.S, Michigan, North America, Ohio, Tennessee
FedEx picked up a lot of business, and FedEx kept the business," Jim Cramer said. GE Aerospace : Shares popped more than 7% after the engine maker beat Wall Street estimates on both earnings and revenue. General Motors : Shares slid more than 5% despite the automaker's better-than-expected second-quarter sales and earnings print. "I'm just point blank saying this is wrong," Cramer said. Then the company just goes in and buys, buys, buys.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Cramer, Mary Barra, They've Organizations: CNBC, Club, UPS, FedEx, GE Aerospace, Boeing, Motors
That compares to LSEG estimates for Ford Motor that call for adjusted earnings per share of 68 cents for the second quarter, down 5.2% from the second quarter of 2023. Ford is scheduled to report Wednesday afternoon after markets close, followed by Chrysler parent Stellantis , which reports earnings biannually, releasing its first-half results Thursday morning. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon GM, Ford and Stellantis stocks in 2024. "Both are expected to raise 2024 guidance." Evercore still expects a "solid" second quarter for Ford, though, trending toward the upper half of its previously announced 2024 guidance.
Persons: Mary Barra, Ford, Dan Levy, Chris McNally, Itay Michaeli, Jim Farley, Michael Wayland, Carlos Tavares, Natalie Knight, Stellantis Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, NYSE DETROIT —, Motors, Detroit, America's, GM, Ford Motor, Chrysler, Ford, Barclays, Citi, CNBC Locations: Detroit, North America, Europe, Auburn Hills, Mich
What history shows: Data from Bespoke Investment Group shows GM beats earnings expectations 87% of the time. Tesla is set to report earnings after the close. What history shows: Bespoke data shows GM beats earnings expectations 62% of the time. What history shows: Ford earnings exceed estimates nearly 70% of the time, according to Bespoke. This quarter: Earnings for the airline are expected to have fallen more than 10% from the year-earlier period, per LSEG.
Persons: Michael Wayland, Tesla, Elon Musk, Dan Levy, Ben Kallo, Benjamin Black, Jim Farley, Matthew Swanson, Swanson, AAL, Leslie Josephs Organizations: Big Tech, Google, Ford Motor, IBM, General Motors, CNBC, Tuesday, GM, Investment Group, LSEG, Barclays, Energy, Deutsche Bank, Wednesday Ford, Ford, Ford Pro, RBC, Thursday, Airlines, American Airlines, Investors Locations: China
Read previewDonald Trump has been an outspoken critic of EVs — and that could spell trouble for America's electric vehicle industry. AdvertisementMusk also reportedly played a part in Trump choosing Ohio senator JD Vance, an even fiercer critic of electric vehicles, as his vice president. Subsidy fearsThe potential loss of the $7,500 tax credit has already sparked concern in the EV industry. "If we see that tax credit cut, then EVs start looking insurmountably expensive for most consumers," he said. "They're already making money building electric vehicles, and the incentive just helps boost volume rather than boosting profits," he added.
Persons: , Donald Trump, EVs, Elon, Trump, Trump's, Musk, JD Vance, Vance, Biden, Tesla, Jon McNeill, Dylan Khoo, Sam Fiorani, Khoo, Elon Musk's, Dan Ives, Ives, Tesla's Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, PAC, Ohio, US, Motors, CNBC, ABI Research, Global, AutoForecast Solutions, Bloomberg Businessweek, Wedbush Securities, EV Locations: Trump, Communist China, China
A GM spokesman said the company's target was about the production capacity, while the question was regarding actually producing 1 million EVs in 2025. Barra did not specifcally address whether it was production or production capacity that she was referring to. The spokesman later said the company would no longer reiterate the EV production capacity plans for 2025. The company has continually said its EV plans will be flexible to meet demand. More details about the automaker's EV plans could come when GM reports second-quarter results on July 23.
Persons: Motors, Mary Barra, Barra Organizations: EV, EVs, GM, CNBC Locations: North America, China
China's BYD opens EV factory in Thailand, first in Southeast Asia
  + stars: | 2024-07-04 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
China's BYD opens its first electric vehicle (EV) factory in Southeast Asia, a fast-growing regional EV market, in Rayong, Thailand, July 4, 2024. China's BYD opened an electric vehicle plant in Thailand on Thursday, the automaker's first factory in Southeast Asia, a fast-growing regional EV market where it has become the dominant player. "Thailand has a clear EV vision and is entering a new era of auto manufacturing," BYD CEO and President Wang Chuanfu said at the opening ceremony. The BYD plant is part of a wave of investment worth more than $1.44 billion from Chinese EV makers who are setting up factories in Thailand, helped by government subsidies and tax incentives. Other EV rivals in the local market include Great Wall Motor, which also has a production facility in Thailand, and U.S. automaker Tesla.
Persons: China's BYD, Wang Chuanfu, Narit Therdsteerasukdi, Liu Xueliang, Tesla Organizations: EV, HK, Toyota Motor, Honda Motor Co, Isuzu Motors, ASEAN, Thailand's, of Investment, European, BYD's, BYD's Asia Pacific, BYD, U.S Locations: Southeast Asia, Rayong, Thailand, China, Hong Kong, BYD, Hungary, BYD's China, BYD's Asia
Tightness in labor markets is boosting the use case of robotics, Morgan Stanley says, predicting a boom in humanoids — or robots in human form. "Advancements in AI are transforming the robotics industry," Morgan Stanley analysts said in a June 26 report called: "Humanoids: Investment Implications of Embodied AI." The bank forecasts a humanoid population of 40,000 by 2030, 8 million by 2040 and 63 million by 2050. Morgan Stanley is not alone in its bullish stance on humanoids. Still, Morgan Stanley outlined a number of sectors set to potentially benefit from humanoids, with social care likely to be the largest total addressable market.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, it's, Elon Musk, Morgan Stanley's, , Michael Bloom, Lora Kolodny Organizations: Labor, Morgan Locations: China, United States, Asia, Europe
Much of the growth, from a forecast 21% market share this year, is expected to come outside of China. The rapid expansion of Chinese automakers is a growing concern for legacy automakers and politicians globally. In North America, Chinese automakers are forecast to only achieve a 3% market share, largely in Mexico, where one in five vehicles are expected to be Chinese brands by 2030. In most other major regions of the world, AlixPartners reports that the share of Chinese automakers is expected to exponentially grow. Chinese brands in China also are expected to grow from 59% to 72% in market share, according to AlixPartners.
Persons: AlixPartners, Mark Wakefield Organizations: Auto Guangzhou, China Import, Export, Visual China, Getty Images, AlixPartners, General Motors, Nurphoto, Getty Locations: Guangzhou, Guangdong Province of China, China, Japan, North America, U.S, AlixPartners, Mexico, Central, South America, Southeast Asia, East, Africa, Bangkok, Nonthaburi Province, Thailand
What's next: Media Matters filed a motion to dismiss Musk's lawsuit in March, but a judge has yet to rule. VCG/GettyGovernment lawsuits and investigationsSEC investigation into Musk's Twitter takeoverThe issues: The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Elon Musk's Twitter purchase. Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty ImagesPersonal lawsuits against MuskTornetta v. MuskThe issues: Tesla shareholder Richard Tornetta sued Musk and Tesla in a class action lawsuit regarding Musk's compensation package, which was worth $55.8 billion at the time. Several lawsuits also allege Musk discriminated against them because of their race, gender, or disability in choosing to fire them. The executives were set to receive golden parachutes, but claim Musk and X have not paid them out.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Musk, Claire Boucher, Grimes, Alex Spiro, Sam Altman, Donald Trump, Spiro, Anna Webber, Angelo Carusone, What's, Gina Carano, Schaerr Jaffe, Tesla, Musk's, Elon, SEC hasn't, Elon Musk's, who've, Owen Diaz, Matt Winkelmeyer, Richard Tornetta, Kimbal Musk, He's, Boucher, Benjamin Brody, Brody, Brody reverberated, Ben Brody, didn't, Robert Kaiden, Kaiden, he's, Agrawal, Parag Agrawal, Ned Segal, Twitter Vijaya Gadde, Sean Edgett, Segal, hadn't Organizations: Service, SpaceX, Business, OpenAI, SEC, Trump, Trump —, Elon, Variety, Media, X Corp, Disney, National Labor Relations Board, UAW, Tesla, Getty Government, Twitter, Securities, Exchange Commission, Justice Department, Reuters, Traffic, Administration, NHTSA, Apple, NLRB, Musk's SpaceX, US, Employment Opportunity, Musk, Nazi, Litigation Locations: Texas, Texas and Missouri, America, Nazi Germany, California, Delaware, San Francisco
Toyota shareholders vote for chairman's re-election
  + stars: | 2024-06-18 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Toyota Motor shareholders backed Chairman Akio Toyoda and nine other members of the automaker's board on Tuesday, despite concerns about governance raised by two leading proxy advisers. Toyota Motor shareholders backed Chairman Akio Toyoda and nine other members of the automaker's board on Tuesday, despite concerns about governance raised by two leading proxy advisers. Toyoda's re-election as chairman was a focal point of its annual shareholder meeting after the proxy advisers recommended that investors vote against it. Shareholders also rejected an investor proposal urging greater disclosure of climate lobbying that had been opposed by Toyota. "I bought Toyota shares with my retirement bonus," 84-year-old Hidenori Takahashi told Reuters ahead of the meeting, adding he believed it was the "best company in Japan" for shareholders.
Persons: Akio Toyoda, Toyoda's, Toyoda, Hidenori Takahashi Organizations: Toyota Motor, Toyota Locations: Japan
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Adobe — The software stock surged 14% on stronger-than-expected quarterly results. Adobe posted adjusted earnings of $4.48 per share on $5.31 billion in revenue and boosted its full-year guidance. JPMorgan also upgraded shares to overweight from neutral. Hasbro — The toymaker's shares jumped 4.8% on the back of an upgrade from Bank of America to buy from neutral. Dell Technologies — The PC maker fell more than 1% after CEO Michael Dell disclosed the sale of 5.7 million shares.
Persons: RH, LSEG, Zscaler, Keith Gill, Stellantis, Michael Dell, , Alex Harring, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh Organizations: Adobe, JPMorgan, Wall, Hasbro, Bank of America, Zero Trust Network Security, Boeing — Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus, New York Times, GameStop, Dell Technologies Locations: Bank, U.S
Tesla shareholders on Thursday voted to ratify CEO Elon Musk's mammoth 2018 pay plan, five months after a judge in Delaware ordered the company to rescind the package, finding it had been improperly granted by the board. Watch Elon Musk speak at the Tesla shareholder meeting nowThe compensation package was previously worth as much as $56 billion in Tesla stock. However, during last year's meeting, Musk promised shareholders he would spend less time on the app going forward, calling the business a "short-term distraction." Regarding the Cybertruck, which hit the market in late 2023, Musk said deliveries are picking up. Musk promised Tesla would move into "limited production" of Optimus in 2025 and test out humanoid robots in its own factories next year.
Persons: Elon, Musk, Judge Kathaleen McCormick, didn't, Tesla, He's, Pony.ai, Didi, Waymo, Optimus, Cathie Wood Organizations: ., Shareholders, SpaceX, Tesla, ARK Locations: Delaware, Austin , Texas, China, Texas
Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares speaks to media on June 13, 2024 following the company's investor day at its North American headquarters in Auburn Hills, Mich.AUBURN HILLS, Mich. – Stellantis has achieved 8.4 billion euros ($9 billion) in cost reductions from the merger of Fiat Chrysler and PSA Groupe that created the company in January 2021, CEO Carlos Tavares said Thursday. That amount is more than double initial expectations from when the merger was announced in 2019, and an increase from the updated 5 billion euros in expected reductions within five years of completion of the merger that formed one of the world's largest automakers. Cost-saving measures have included reshaping the company's supply chain and operations, as well as headcount reductions. Since the merger was agreed to in December 2019, Stellantis has reduced headcount by 15.5%, or roughly 47,500 employees, through 2023, according to public filings. Several Stellantis executives described the cuts to CNBC as difficult but effective.
Persons: Carlos Tavares, – Stellantis, Tavares, Stellantis Organizations: Fiat Chrysler, PSA Groupe, CNBC Locations: Auburn Hills, Mich, AUBURN HILLS, U.S, Italy
Massimo Pinca | ReutersDETROIT – Since spearheading a merger to create Stellantis in 2021, CEO Carlos Tavares has been on a cost-cutting mission. "We are not in the race to transition to EVs, but in a race to cut cost on EVs," Tavares said in late May during a Bernstein investor conference. The cuts are part of Stellantis' strategic plan to increase profits and double revenue to 300 billion euros by 2030. Executives on Thursday will outline developments across Stellantis' regions and businesses, including its capital and operational disciplines, according to Stellantis CFO Natalie Knight. "The share price reaction to the [capital markets day] will likely be driven by how these short-term concerns are addressed.
Persons: Carlos Tavares, Massimo Pinca, Tavares, " Tavares, Stellantis, Ned Curic, EVs, I've, Natalie Knight, David Dee Delgado, Ram, China's, Patrick Hummel Organizations: Reuters DETROIT, Atlantic, PSA Groupe, Fiat Chrysler, Ram, CNBC, Amazon, New York, Auto, Reuters, Cox Automotive, UBS, GM, Ford Locations: Turin, Italy, U.S, Auburn Hills , Michigan, Manhattan , New York, China
Read previewAnother major Tesla shareholder is publicly opposing Elon Musk's multibillion-dollar pay package just days before investors are set to vote on the enormous figure ahead of the automaker's annual shareholder meeting on Thursday. AdvertisementDespite Musk's other endeavors, Tesla remains a car company — and the automaker's output and stock valuation should reflect that, Ailman said. He designed the cars," Ailman told the outlet. Proxy advisors are recommending investors vote no on the pay package, advice which Tesla's passive investors — about 20% of investors in total — are likely to follow, Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi told BI. "He wants to go to Mars," Ailman told CNBC.
Persons: , Elon Musk's, Christopher Ailman, Ailman, Tesla, Bernstein, Toni Sacconaghi, CalSTRS, Musk, Let's Organizations: Service, California State Teachers, CNBC, Business, Golden State, Tesla, Nvidia Locations: Delaware, California, Golden
Affirm Holdings – The stock popped nearly 7% following the announcement that its buy now, pay later loans will be embedded into Apple Pay as an option for purchases. U.S. Apple Pay users on iPhones and iPads will be able to use the option later this year, the company said in a filing. General Motors – The automaker's stock added about 2% after announcing a $6 billion share repurchase program. Apple – The stock jumped around 6% one day after the iPhone maker announced its artificial intelligence strategy at its Worldwide Developers Conference . GameStop – The stock rose about 2%, trimming losses after its recent slide.
Persons: General Motors, Siri, Keith Gill, Pierre Brondeau, Mark Douglas, Ronaldo Pereira, Elliott, Lee Cole, FactSet, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound Organizations: Apple Pay, Apple, General, GM, Worldwide Developers, OpenAI, GameStop, FMC, JPMorgan, Reuters, Apollo, Kyndryl Holdings, Southwest Airlines –, Academy Sports, Bank of America Locations: Southwest
Eli Lilly — Eli Lilly shares rose 2% after a panel of FDA advisors recommended the approval of its Alzheimer's drug known as donanemab. General Motors — The automaker's stock added more than 1% after its board authorized a $6 billion stock buyback program . Shopify — The e-commerce stock rose about 1% after JPMorgan initiated coverage with an overweight rating. Apple — Apple shares slipped less than 1% a day after the iPhone maker's Worldwide Developers Conference, where it revealed its artificial intelligence plans , called Apple Intelligence. GameStop — GameStop shares slipped 1% before the bell, continuing its volatile ride.
Persons: Eli Lilly, General Motors, Siri, Keith Gill's, Lee Cole, , Jesse Pound, Sarah Min Organizations: General, JPMorgan, Apple, Apple Intelligence, Technology, Reuters, Apollo, Kyndryl Holdings, GameStop, Calavo, , Calavo Growers
DETROIT – General Motors is trimming its expected sales and production of all-electric vehicles this year, as U.S. adoption of EVs occurs slower than expected. GM Chief Financial Officer Paul Jacobson said the company now expects production of 200,000 to 250,000 EVs this year, down from a previously announced range of 200,000 to 300,000. Jacobson said GM expects EVs to make up 8% of U.S. sales industrywide this year. GM expects its EVs to be profitable on a production, or contribution-margin basis, once it reaches production of 200,000 units. EV sales totaled 16,425 units, or 2.8% of the automaker's overall sales during the period.
Persons: Paul Jacobson, Jacobson, EVs Organizations: DETROIT, GM, Deutsche Bank Locations: North America
Elon Musk has been criticized for his decision to redirect Tesla's Nvidia chips to X. But Tesla's former head of AI infrastructure, Tim Zaman has come forward to defend Musk's decision. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementDiverting Tesla's AI chips to X made sense given the logistics that come with assembling a supercomputer, the automaker's former head of AI infrastructure said on Tuesday. "The practicalities of building a supercomputer are insane once you get down to it," Tim Zaman wrote in an X post.
Persons: Elon Musk, Tim Zaman, Zaman, Organizations: Service
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