Maineiac12
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$5 billion model e loss? Ouch. I wonder if this plant production pause is for retooling or to slow production to line up with demand.
Or may be they increased the production earlier because sales are up 86% this year but overshot and are sitting on a large inventory.$5 billion model e loss? Ouch. I wonder if this plant production pause is for retooling or to slow production to line up with demand.
while agree with you on the upfront costs in what world does it cost $5 billion in losses per year? They wrote that off last year too no? Not too mention 21-22. A state of the art building for them and assembly line would cost no more then 1 billion and let’s just say it cost them 1 billion for a battery plant and $1 billion for R&RFords loses are due to the amount of upfront infrastructure they have built out. Overtime it will allow them to reach profitability sooner. What they need is numbers. When the demand picks up, their cost to ramp up will be negligible.
It’s the demand we need to see change.
The other legacy ICE manufacturers have yet to spend what will be necessary to meet future demand.
Said another way, Ford has front loaded their major costs for EV production.
R&D on new models, a battery plant in Michigan, 2 battery plants in Kentucky, a battery plant in Tennessee, and an assembly plant in Tennessee complete with its own stamping plant.while agree with you on the upfront costs in what world does it cost $5 billion in losses per year?
In the "accountants of businesses that don't like to pay taxes and don't mind the bad press of revealing massive losses" world. If you factor investments in to fixed capital resources, you get to claim that loss. If they didn't apply those one-time costs to EV's they would show profit per vehicle, but that wouldn't give them any tax advantage.in what world does it cost $5 billion in losses per year?
General Motors has not paid federal taxes in more than a decade. In fact, it will likely not pay U.S. federal income tax for the next several years, its former chief financial officer has said.
Likewise, Ford Motor Co. has paid U.S. income tax only three of the last 10 years, based on filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Each company has gotten about $450 million in tax refunds since 2009, an economist estimated, based on the filings.
According to GM's latest 10-K filing, the company is owed $104 million as a tax refund for 2018.
The two companies have turned profits between them totaling more than $100 billion in the past 10 years.
plus their investments into the new lithium mine…R&D on new models, a battery plant in Michigan, 2 battery plants in Kentucky, a battery plant in Tennessee, and an assembly plant in Tennessee complete with its own stamping plant.
Could be poorly written article too.I’m not saying anything you said was wrong , I’m just dumbfounded In The losses for something that isn’t their main business - say the Kentucky super duty plant.