Posts Tagged ‘general motors’

Ford third-quarter profit soars 69% over a year ago

Posted in Health, News, economy, what on October 27th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

Ford Motor Co. demonstrated the growing strength of the U.S. auto industry Tuesday by posting a third-quarter profit of $1.7 billion, a 69% jump over the same period a year ago and surpassing a previous record set in 1997.

The automaker — which unlike General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group avoided bankruptcy reorganization last year — benefitted from both cost cutting and top-line performance, gaining U.S. market share and selling vehicles for higher prices.

“Overall, we are doing better than we expected through the first nine months of the year,” said Alan Mulally, Ford’s chief executive, “and we expect to deliver solid profits in the fourth quarter and for the full year.”

Ford has reduced its level of sales-incentive spending at the same time buyers are adding options to their cars and spending more, according to Edmunds.com, the auto information company. Edmunds.com estimated that buyers paid an average of $30,636 for a Ford in September, slightly higher than a year ago and up 10% from five years ago.


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“For a long time, they weren’t really in the car market very strongly, depending mostly on trucks and SUVs. Now they have good cars, and the car market is where the action has been in recent years,” said Jessica Caldwell, an analyst with Edmunds.com.

Ford’s profit equaled 43 cents a share and compared with earnings of $1 billion, or 29 cents a share, in the same period a year earlier. It was the automaker’s sixth consecutive profitable quarter. Revenue fell to $29 billion from $30.3 billion a year earlier, before the company sold off Volvo, the Swedish automaker, to focus on its core Ford and Lincoln brands. Year to date, the company has earned $6.4 billion.

In early trading, Ford shares rose 7 cents to $14.22.

“This was another strong quarter,” said Mulally. “The key drivers for improvement in 2011 will be our growing product strength, a gradually strengthening economy and an unrelenting focus on improving the competitiveness of all our operations.”

On Friday, Ford plans to use some of the cash it is generating to pay off the remaining $3.6 million it owes to the United Auto Workers union retiree healthcare trust, which will save it about $330 million in annual interest expenses. The automaker borrowed heavily to stay afloat during the recession and is working to pay back those loans.

The payment will reduce the company’s total debt to $22.8 billion, a net reduction of $10.8 billion from the end of 2009. Ford said it expected its cash holdings to be equal to its total debt by the year’s end, earlier than it previously anticipated. Ford also plans a stock offering that would convert $3.5 billion in debt to common stock during the fourth quarter.

“We are clearly ahead of where we thought we would be on improving our balance sheet and repaying our loans,” Mulally said. “This allows us to reduce our annualized interest payments by over $800 million.”

Ford’s American operations had an operating profit of $1.6 billion, compared with $300 million in the same period a year earlier. The company was profitable in South America and in Asia, driven by gains in China and India, but lost money in Europe. The company said it expected its European operations to become profitable in this year’s fourth quarter.

Much of the automaker’s success is coming from a string of successful new products, such as the Fusion sedan and the Edge SUV. Truck sales, especially government and business fleet sales of the F-150 pickup also added to the quarterly profit, Caldwell said.

Ford’s latest vehicles have been well received by consumers.

“It’s much better than the Ford of five years ago,” Caldwell said.

Ford sales have risen 21% to 1.4 million vehicles through the first nine months of this year. That’s more than double the overall industry gain. Its share of the U.S. market has grown to 16.7% from 15.2% — the largest jump of any automaker this year, according to Autodata Corp.

The automaker has been able to restructure so it can operate profitably with what are considered historically low auto sales numbers.

There are some signs of a more robust rebound in the U.S. auto market, which was up about 10% through the first nine months of the year.

Mark Fields, Ford’s president of the Americas, said Monday that U.S. auto sales hit an annualized pace of about 12 million vehicles in October, its best rate so far this year. Automakers will report their October sales results next week.

jerry.hirsch@latimes.com

Ford third-quarter profit soars 69% over a year ago

New claims for jobless benefits rise

Posted in Health, News, Politics, Science, Tech, economy on August 5th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

Initial requests for jobless benefits rose last week to their highest level since April, a sign that hiring remains weak and some companies are still cutting workers.

The Labor Department said Thursday that new claims for unemployment insurance rose by 19,000 to a seasonally adjusted 479,000. Analysts had expected a small drop. Claims have risen twice in the past three weeks.

Some of the increase in claims stemmed from difficulties the government has in adjusting for seasonal factors.


Dow kicks out GM and Citigroup

Posted in News on June 1st, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

citi

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Two companies that have received billions of dollars in aid from the U.S. government have been kicked out of the Dow Jones industrial average (INDU).

According to a statement released Monday, General Motors, which filed for bankruptcy on Monday, will be replaced by Cisco Systems (CSCO, Fortune 500); Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) will be replaced by The Travelers Companies (TRV, Fortune 500).

The changes in the Dow will go into effect on on June 8, according to Dow Jones.

GM shares opened for trading on the New York Stock Exchange after a brief delay Monday morning, but the NYSE says the shares will be delisted before trading begins Tuesday. GM has the right to appeal that decision.

GM stock plunged to 75 cents per share on Friday, its lowest level since the Great Depression. Shares of Citigroup dipped below $1 per share in early March but were trading above $3 on Monday.

General Motors became ineligible for inclusion in the benchmark indicator when it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Monday.

“The parlous state of GM has left us with no choice but to remove it from The Dow,” said Robert Thomson, managing editor of The Wall Street Journal and editor-in-chief for all of Dow Jones, in a written statement. “A bankruptcy filing immediately disqualifies a stock regardless of a company’s history or its role as a cultural icon.”

0:00 /2:43GM: Beyond bankruptcy

The company taking the place for the bankrupt automaker is tech bellwether Cisco Systems, which is based in San Jose, Calif., and makes networking equipment.

“We were reluctant to remove Citigroup at the height of the financial frenzy, but it is clear that the bank is in the midst of a substantial restructuring which will see the government with a large and ongoing stake,” said Thomson.

Thomson left the door open for the financial giant to be put back on the Dow when it stabilizes. “We genuinely hope that once the bank has refashioned itself that we will again be able to consider it for inclusion – Citigroup is a renowned institution, not only in this country, but around the world.”

GM ends an 83-year run as a component of the Dow. The automaker was added to the index twice, first for 18 months in 1915 and then again on Aug. 31, 1925, according to the release from Dow Jones.

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The only current company with a longer history as a component of the index is General Electric (GE, Fortune 500). GE was initially included in the Dow in 1896 but was removed after a few years of fitful stops and starts. In 1907 it was relisted.

GM’s absence from the Dow marks the auto industry’s waning power and influence. And its replacement — a technology heavyweight — is representative of larger industrial evolutions. Cisco’s “communications and computer-networking products are vital to an economy and culture still adapting to the Information Age – just as automobiles were essential to America in the 20th Century,” Thompson said.

Citigroup joined the Dow in 1997, as Citicorp. Ironically, Travelers merged with Citicorp to form Citigroup in 1998, creating what was then termed a “financial supermarket.” Citigroup spun off Travelers in 2002. At the time of the 1998 merger, Travelers was a member of the Dow 30.

Dow Jones decided to add another financial company to the index in order to re-calibrate the index. When the Dow let go of American International Group in September, it replaced the insurance company with Kraft Foods (KFT, Fortune 500) because the financial sector was in so much turmoil.

“The selection of Travelers, a property and casualty insurance company, is intended to restore the financials industry to full representation in The Dow,” said Thomson.

Dow Jones said the changes won’t cause any disruption in the level of the index. A divisor is used to calculate The Dow from its components’ prices, which prevents any distortion in the Dow.

“In our judgment, the stocks until now helped the Dow Jones industrial average tell the daily story of the stock market,” said John A. Prestbo, editor and executive director of Dow Jones Indexes, in the written statement. “The extraordinary conditions of the severe bear market and recession kept these stocks relevant and representative for a longer period than might have been the case in more normal times.”