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Ford To Cut 3,000 Jobs To Fund Shift Toward Electric Vehicles

Ford said it’s cutting 3,000 jobs this week in a move to boost profits as it seeks to fund $50 billion it plans to spend on EVs.

A Ford Mustang Mach-E is charged at a Ford dealership in Colma, California, US, on Friday, July 22, 2022. Ford Motor Co. is expected to release earnings figures on July 27.
A Ford Mustang Mach-E is charged at a Ford dealership in Colma, California, US, on Friday, July 22, 2022. Ford Motor Co. is expected to release earnings figures on July 27.

Ford Motor Co. said it’s cutting 3,000 jobs this week in a move to boost profits as it seeks to fund the $50 billion it plans to spend on electric vehicles.

The cuts will come primarily in the US, while some positions also are being eliminated in Canada and India, a company spokesman said. The total includes 2,000 salaried workers and 1,000 contract personnel.

Most are coming from Ford’s operations that build traditional internal combustion engine vehicles, which Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley has said he wants to make the “the profit and cash engine for the entire enterprise.”

Read more: Ford Plans Up to 8,000 Job Cuts to Help Fund EV Investment

Ford plans to build 2 million electric vehicles a year by the end of 2026, up from less than 64,000 last year, as it seeks to catch EV leader Tesla Inc. To finance its ambitions, Farley has said he wants to make more money on traditional gasoline-fueled vehicles like the Bronco sport-utility vehicle. He has repeatedly said the company has too many workers.

“Building this future requires changing and reshaping virtually all aspects of the way we have operated for more than a century,” Farley and Executive Chairman Bill Ford wrote in a memo to employees Monday. “This is a difficult and emotional time. The people leaving the company this week are friends and coworkers and we want to thank them for all they have contributed.”

A spokesman didn’t rule out additional job cuts. Bloomberg previously reported Ford is considering eliminating as many as 8,000 jobs.

Ford shares fell as much as 6.1% and were down 4.7% to $15.13 at 1:25 p.m. in New York as investors digested the job-cut news and a separate $1.7 billion verdict against the automaker on Aug. 19. Ford said it is appealing.

(Updates with share price in the final paragraph. A previous version corrected the number of EVs Ford built last year.)

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