VW\, Ford team up on trucks\, eye deals on EVs\, self-driving cars

VW, Ford team up on trucks, eye deals on EVs, self-driving cars

Reuters  |  DETROIT 

By Ben and Jan Schwartz

Ford and announced their partnership against the backdrop of the auto show. The tie-up, which starts with sales of vans and medium-sized pickups in 2022, will not involve a merger or equity stakes, the companies said.

The expanding alliance, which will be governed by a joint committee that includes the CEOs of both companies, highlights the growing pressure on global automakers to manage the costs of developing electric and self-driving vehicles, as well as technology to meet tougher emissions standards for millions of internal combustion vehicles they will sell in coming years.

Ford will provide more details on how the alliance affects Ford's regional operations in coming weeks, but does not expect any job cuts in Ford plants as a result of the alliance, Ford said.

Ford will and build medium-sized pickups for both companies, Volkswagen said. Ford will also and build larger commercial vans for European customers, while Volkswagen will develop and build a city van. Vans could be built in in Turkey, said.

The companies estimate the commercial van and pickup cooperation will yield improved annual pretax operating results starting in 2023.

Ford and have signed a memorandum of understanding to jointly develop electric and self-driving vehicles, VW said.

VW shares were up 0.6 percent in Ford gained 0.7 percent to $9.05 in pre-market U.S. trading.

U.S. AND SLOWDOWNS

Europe's biggest automaker and the No. 2 U.S. automaker have been exploring closer cooperation as trade frictions force carmakers to rethink where they build vehicles for Europe, the and Slowdowns in the world's largest auto markets - and the - have ratcheted up the pressure to cut costs.

The tie-up with Volkswagen is a big bet for Ford's Hackett since he took over in May 2017 from the ousted with the mandate to speed up decision-making and cut costs. Some analysts and investors have been frustrated by Ford's laggard stock price and a perceived lack of details from Hackett about the Dearborn, Michigan-based automaker's $11 billion restructuring.

Last week, Ford said it would cut thousands of jobs, discontinue building money-losing vehicles and look at closing plants as part of a turnaround effort for its unprofitable European business.

Last month, Volkswagen announced another 3 billion euros ($3.4 billion) of cost cuts as part of its effort to improve profit margins and fund its shift to electric cars and automated driving.

On Monday, Volkswagen said it would invest $800 million to build an electric vehicle plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, prompting U.S. to congratulate the city and state in a post on the following day.

But the has been pushing to end subsidies on electric vehicles that would help the plant and the alliance.

(Reporting by Ben Klayman, and in Detroit; Additional reporting by in Washington; Writing by Nick Zieminski; Editing by and Matthew Lewis)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 15 2019. 19:44 IST