Ford teases F-150 reveal, plans to capture buyers not yet sold on electric vehicles

Pickup drivers worried about being forced to drive an all-electric vehicle need to just breathe. Not only will gasoline-powered trucks be around for at long time, but the maker of the bestselling truck in America just disclosed plans to keep traditional F-150 customers happy.

Ford CEO Jim Farley said he is hearing consumers who express apprehension about all-electric vehicles and has adjusted company strategy in a way that sets the automaker apart from competitors.

A deep dive into sales data over the past three years helps explain why he disclosed that Ford will reveal a refreshed Ford F-150 hybrid at the Detroit auto show in mid-September. Many competitors are touting a desire to shift completely to electric vehicles. Ford is pumping the brakes.

Ford plans to continues its push into hybrid vehicles, which use both gasoline and battery power, to accommodate consumers who want to slow down their pending divorce from the traditional fuel pump, Farley revealed after second-quarter earnings were announced last week.

While consumers are purchasing electric vehicles, the market pricing is still dynamic and Ford is losing billions on the pivot from old internal combustion engines (ICE) to battery electric. Meanwhile, traditional F-Series trucks are selling like crazy and continuing to generate profits that have sustained Ford for decades.

Farley also dialed back the Ford forecast to produce 600,000 electric vehicles annually by 2024, not 2023.

He spotlighted hybrids, which increase fuel efficiency for truck owners while allowing them to go to the gas pump in times of need rather than find a charging station to plug in. As automakers figure out how many EVs to build, and what prices will work, Ford says it will work to tip-toe consumers away from internal combustion engines into electrification.

Since introducing the F-150 hybrid during fourth quarter 2020, Ford has sold 103,709 vehicles. During second quarter 2023, F-150 hybrid sales spiked 33% over the same period a year ago with 13,285 vehicles. The 2023 F-150 hybrid has been popular in Texas, California and Florida.

It’s a move that includes only one competitor: Toyota and its Tundra full-size pickup truck.

Ford CEO spells out the plan

What Farley told industry analysts after the company earnings, which exceeded Wall Street expectations:

  • “We maintain flexibility on … when we reach 2 million total EV globalcapacity because we are balancing growth, profitability and returns.”
  • “We have the flexibility to offer customers choice of ICE, hybrids and full electrics in the years to come.”
  • “Our hybrid offerings are extremely popular. F-150 is the bestselling vehicle in the U.S. for 46 years. 10% of all F-150s and 56% of all Mavericks sold in the U.S. are sold as hybrids.”
  • “We are adding hybrid options across our ICE lineup, and we expect to quadruple our hybrid sales in the next five years, and we’re already No. 2 in the market last year.”
  • “We believe demand for our internal combustion and our hybrid portfolio will be … potentially longer and richer than most expected. … We made sure Ford is profitable as we move through this ICE-to-EV transition.”
  • “A couple of years ago we decided to continue our hybrid investment in our heavier vehicles. And those hybrid systems are quite different, let’s say, to Toyota and the Japanese OEMs. And we have been surprised, frankly, at the popularity of hybrid systems for F-150.”
  • “We never thought we would be at 60% hybrid mix for Maverick. It was far beyond our expectation. And so we’re just listening to the market. We believe that ICE customers, Blue customers don’t want to be left behind.
  • “We have a lot of choices between electrification, partial electrification and ICE. … So all I am saying is you’re going to see a lot more hybrid systems from us, but don’t think of them in the traditional sense of an Escape hybrid or Prius.”
  • “The hybrids I am referring to are not plug-in hybrids. They are vehicles without a plug.”