Farley faces pressure to detail Ford’s path to an electric future

Riding a rising stock price, a splashy new model intro and a friendly presidential visit, new Ford Motor Co. Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley faces his biggest test yet: Explaining his strategy for making the 118-year-old automaker relevant in the electric age.

Farley on Wednesday convenes the company’s long-awaited Capital Markets Day, where investors and analysts hope he details a vision for embracing an all-electric future that rivals the audacious goal that General Motors Co. CEO Mary Barra set out. She pledged to ditch the internal combustion engines by the middle of the next decade.

Jim Farley, Ford Motor Company's chief executive officer, stands next to the company's new Ford F-150 Lightning, Wednesday, May 19, 2021, in Dearborn, Mich.

The stakes could not be higher. Consultant KPMG recently predicted that one or two of the world’s top automakers will fail to navigate the transition to electric vehicles and cease to exist. Ford has an image as an EV laggard, trailing GM and Tesla Inc.

Farley understands this is a put-up or shut-up moment.

“It’s a big deal,” he told reporters May 19 at the introduction of the electric F-150 Lightning pickup. “It’s my management team’s coming-out party.”

And they’d better come out swinging because expectations are as high as Ford’s stock price, which has nearly doubled since Farley took over as CEO Oct. 1. He’s already doubled Ford’s spending on battery-powered cars to $22 billion, but he’s only shown three all-electric models so far, while GM has said it plans to field 30 EVs by 2025 and spend $27 billion.

“How long does it take to effect change?” Dan Levy, an analyst with Credit Suisse, wrote in a May 24 investor note on the meeting the company is calling Delivering Ford+. “We might see Ford provide firmer timing on transition to 100%” electric vehicles.”

That transition is tricky for Ford, which now depends on selling nearly 900,000 gasoline-fueled F-Series trucks a year to haul in most of its annual profit.