Ford sales up 2% in January, boosted by record EV sales

Ford Motor Co.’s U.S. sales rose 2% year-over-year in January, boosted by record sales of its all-electric vehicles, which more than doubled over that period.

The Dearborn automaker reported Thursday that it sold 146,356 new vehicles in the U.S. last month. Of those sales, the vast majority — 133,293, or 91% — came from internal combustion vehicles, sales of which were up 2.2%. Hybrid vehicles, meanwhile, accounted for 7,816 sales, which marked a 26.3% drop from the same period last year. And battery-electric vehicle sales from Ford’s Mustang Mach-E, F-150 Lightning and E-Transit totaled 5,247 units — up 104% from a year ago.

The automaker reported that it claimed 6.1% of the EV segment in January, up one percentage point from a year ago. The segment remains dominated by Tesla, Inc., while Ford ended 2022 as the No. 2 EV seller in the U.S.

Sales of the F-150 Lightning, which went on sale last spring, totaled 2,264 units in January. E-Transit sales were up 159% to 357 units. And Ford reported 2,626 sales of the Mustang Mach-E, up 10.8% year-over-year. Earlier this week, the automaker announced across-the-board price cuts on the crossover vehicle.

Analysts at market research firm Cox Automotive were still crunching the final sales numbers for the month, but said in a post Thursday that January “did produce some solid sales reports and signs of market strength,” with the highlight being strong numbers from the Hyundai and Kia brands. Honda also posted a year-over-year sales increase of more than 14%. Only Toyota saw a “notable” sales drop, according to Cox.

The firm had forecast a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 15.6 million sales, but said that early data indicated sales likely came in slightly higher, at a rate of 15.7 million units. Cox experts expected to see a 2.7% year-over-year sales gain in January.

“Either way, new-vehicle sales in January were solid and likely a sign that improved inventory levels are having the expected positive effect,” according to Cox. Expect automakers to pivot in the coming months to a focus on fleet sales amid higher interest rates and inflationary pressures on retail consumers, analysts said.