Ford’s QQ1 2024 results show a bifurcated earnings trajectory driven by a high-margin Ford Pro business and ongoing challenges in the Ford Model e (EV) segment. Revenue reached $42.78 billion, up 3% year over year, while net income of $1.33 billion and adjusted EBIT of $2.80 billion (vs. GAAP EBIT of $1.26 billion) underscored the profitability power of Pro within Ford+. Pro delivered $3.0 billion EBIT with a 16.7% margin, catapulting visibility for durable operating leverage as the segment expands its software and physical services moat. However, Model e incurred a substantial loss (~$1.3 billion) due to pricing pressure and EV market dynamics, illustrating the continued drag from early-stage EV profitability on a consolidated basis. The company guided a high-end EBIT trajectory for 2024: adjusted EBIT of $10–12 billion, adjusted free cash flow (FCF) of $6.5–7.5 billion, and CapEx of $8–9 billion, with CapEx moderating toward the lower end given EV landscape refinements. Ford remains solidly funded with about $43 billion of liquidity and $25 billion of cash, and reaffirmed a policy to return 40–50% of adjusted FCF to shareholders, signaling a balance between deployment for growth and prudent capital management. The QQ1 results reinforce Ford+ as a framework for growth, with meaningful progress in Pro, a disciplined approach to EV investments, and a focus on structural cost reductions and quality improvements across launches. The near-term risk remains centered on EV profitability, pricing dynamics, and the pace of launches, even as Ford’s diversified product portfolio and multi-energy strategy position the company for selective upside as Pro scales and EV economics improve.