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After Earnings, Is Ford Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued?
Ford Motor F released its fourth-quarter earnings report on Feb. 10. Here’s Morningstar’s take on Ford’s earnings and stock.
Key Morningstar Metrics for Ford Motor
What We Thought of Ford Motor’s Q4 Earnings
Ford’s fourth-quarter 2025 adjusted diluted EPS of $0.13 missed the $0.19 LSEG consensus, but the stock rose slightly in after-hours trading after Ford provided strong 2026 adjusted EBIT guidance of $8 billion to $10 billion.
Why it matters: Going into earnings, 2026 guidance, and the Novelis plant fire impact on aluminum for F-Series production were two main points of concern. EBIT guidance at the midpoint is 32% higher than 2025’s $6.8 billion, and Novelis took $2 billion from 2025 EBIT, as did net tariff costs.
The bottom line: We maintain our fair value estimate of $16 for no-moat Ford, and we will reassess all modeling inputs when we roll our model forward for the 10-K. We are glad to see continued progress in cost control and see potential for positive 2026 earnings surprises, provided no US recession.
Fair Value Estimate for Ford Motor
With its 3-star rating, we believe Ford’s stock is fairly valued compared with our long-term fair value estimate of $16 per share. After updating our model for Ford’s Dec. 15 EV restructuring and 2025 guidance increase, we are leaving our fair value estimate unchanged at $16 per share. We have revised our 2025 adjusted EBIT forecast to $6.9 billion. Average EBIT margin excluding equity income is 3.6%, and our midcycle margin for this metric is about 5%.
Read more about Ford Motor’s fair value estimate.
Economic Moat Rating
Ford does not have a moat, and we do not expect that to change, as there are too many obstacles to deal with at once. Vehicle manufacturing is a very capital-intensive business, but barriers to entry are not as high as in the past. The industry is already full of strong competition, so it is nearly impossible for one firm to gain a durable advantage over another. Foreign automakers from China may soon enter developed markets such as the US as they already have in Europe, and South Korea’s Hyundai and Kia as well as Tesla have become formidable competitors. Nascent EV makers such as Rivian and Lucid could also be a formidable threat one day if they survive. Furthermore, the auto industry is so cyclical that in bad times even the best automakers cannot avoid large declines in return on invested capital and profit. Cost-cutting helps ease the pain, but it does not restore all lost profit.
Read more about Ford Motor’s economic moat.
Financial Strength
Year-end 2024 global pension underfunding totaled about $547 million compared with about $8.2 billion at year-end 2015, while salaried employee retiree healthcare adds another $4.4 billion of shortfall. Nearly all underfunding is from pay-as-you-go plans (mostly from Germany and US senior management plans) that are always unfunded and pay benefits paid from general corporate cash. Management often guides funded plan contributions to be limited to annual service cost. 2025 funded plan contributions are guided to about $800 million, plus about $450 million of benefit payments for unfunded plans. Unfunded plan benefit payments will likely be around $400 million annually in our view.
Comments at analyst days indicate that share repurchases are possible but will probably be done only to offset dilution from stock options. Ford’s dividend is back to its pre-pandemic level, and special dividends are possible and were declared for 2023-25.
Read more about Ford Motor’s financial strength.
Risk and Uncertainty
Our Uncertainty Rating for Ford is High. Ford is spent tens of billions since 2022 betting consumers will switch to electric vehicles, and so much capital was wasted once that adoption proved too slow following regulatory changes in the United States. Barriers to entry are declining as a growing global market reduces fixed costs as a percentage of sales for new entrants. Macroeconomic conditions, rising interest rates, commodity prices, and trade agreement and tariff changes in key markets, such as the US, Europe, and China, can quickly derail management’s plans and guidance, while significant disruption is on the horizon as vehicles become more high-tech and autonomous.
Ford’s union relationships historically have been better than GM’s. However, UAW President Shawn Fain in 2023 said Ford and the UAW are no longer working together as a team. We are concerned about a very long strike in May 2028 because the UAW wants to resume pensions and retiree healthcare for all its workers, which we don’t see as affordable.
One of the largest environmental, social, and governance risks we see with Ford is increasing regulatory scrutiny on combustion vehicles, but electric vehicles such as the Mach-E and F-150 Lightning show Ford is serious about switching away from combustion, and the regulatory environment is not as severe as it had been.
Read more about Ford’s risk and uncertainty.
F Bulls Say
F Bears Say
This article was compiled by Rachel Schlueter.