Ford’s QQ2 2024 results reflect a resilient core vehicle business paired with a deliberate pivot toward software-driven revenue and higher-margin services. Revenue of $47.808 billion rose approximately 6% year over year, while gross profit totaled $4.528 billion for a gross margin of 9.47%. The quarter produced operating income of $1.756 billion and net income of $1.831 billion, translating to an EPS of $0.46. Management reaffirmed the full-year company adjusted EBIT target of $10–$12 billion and raised adjusted free cash flow guidance to $7.5–$8.5 billion, supported by lower-than-expected capital expenditures and ongoing efficiency initiatives. Ford’s Ford Pro business continued to deliver high-margin, durable revenue, contributing to an EBIT of about $2.6 billion (margin >15%), while Ford Blue posted $1.2 billion of EBIT (4.4% margin) amid higher warranty costs.
A notable между- quarter dynamic is Model e’s continued losses (-$1.1 billion) as Ford refines its EV strategy, cost structure, and scale advantages for affordable EVs. Ford Credit generated $343 million in EBIT, with credit losses and insurance costs offset by financing margins. Management highlights a clear path to profitability in lower-cost EV platforms via component-level partnerships and scalable software/services (targeting $1 billion in software revenue next year with >50% gross margins). The company remains focused on a multi-energy, flexible manufacturing model and a robust Pro ecosystem (27,000 commercial service bases; 610,000 Ford Pro Intelligence paid subscriptions; 4+ billion miles tracked via Pro telematics).
Key growth catalysts include: (i) Pro’s ongoing expansion into software and physical services, (ii) a scalable, low-cost EV platform under development by the Skunkworks/affordable platform team, (iii) multi-energy Super Duty capacity expansion to meet infrastructure demand and chassis demand, and (iv) a transition to OTA-enabled, connected-vehicle software across core platforms. The execution risk remains elevated due to warranty normalization, Turkey-related inflationary pressures, and competitive EV pricing dynamics; however, the breadth of Ford+ investments supports a constructive long-term outlook if demand remains resilient and cost discipline persists.