Ford’s Farley: ‘We see the Chinese as the main competitor, not GM or Toyota’

Ford Motor Co. CEO Jim Farley is looking further afield than the Dearborn automaker’s traditional rivals as the company charts a future defined by electric, digitally-connected vehicles: namely, to China.

“We see the Chinese as the main competitor, not GM or Toyota,” said Farley, speaking at a Morgan Stanley conference Thursday. The comment came in response to a question about how Ford can preserve its current strategy of focusing on the segments where it’s most successful, in the context of an increasingly competitive landscape and as Chinese automakers make significant gains.

“As far as the Chinese (are) concerned, it’s going to be really humbling. They produce 70% of the electric vehicles in the world in China,” Farley said. “The Chinese are going to be the powerhouse, we think. To beat them, you either have to have a very distinct brand — which we think we do, by leaning into our icons — or you have to beat them on cost. But how do you beat them on cost if their scale is five times yours?”

Farley pointed to Chinese competitors like SAIC Motor, Great Wall Motor and Geely — but the one he’s watching the closest is BYD Auto, the company that this year ascended to China’s top-selling auto brand and which is vying with Tesla Inc. for the title of the world’s biggest electric-vehicle maker. Farley noted BYD’s massive scale, investments in lithium iron phosphate battery chemistry and its high levels of vertical integration.

“I like BYD. Totally vertically-integrated, aggressive, unapologetic,” he said. “Very, very impressive company.”

With China now holding the title of the world’s largest auto exporter and as the country maintains dominance over EV battery technology, Farley said the United States has a decision to make, even amid high geopolitical tensions: “If localizing their (battery) technology in the U.S. gets caught up in politics, the customer’s really going to get screwed. So we have to work through that in this country.”

Detroit’s automakers have been reassessing their strategies in China amid rapidly increasing competition from domestic manufacturers there that are leading the way on electrification and offering high-quality, affordably-priced EVs. The stakes are high, as China is not only the world’s largest auto market, but the top EV market in the world.

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