By Nick Carey and Ben Klayman
The No. 2 U.S. automaker, which has announced an alliance with Germany's Volkswagen AG
That was in contrast to Ford's larger U.S. rival General Motors Co
Shanks reiterated Wednesday that Ford's market-leading presence in Britain gave it extensive exposure to the effects of Brexit. Ford said on Jan. 10 that it would cut thousands of jobs and look at plant closures in Europe as part of its plan to return to profit in the region. Ford posted a fourth-quarter net loss of $116 million, or 3 cents a share, down from a net profit of $2.5 billion, or 63 cents a share, in the same quarter in 2017, largely due to one-time pension costs and other charges.
Excluding one-time charges, it earned 30 cents a share, in line with an outlook Ford executives provided last week that was shy of Wall Street's expectations.
In North America, Ford posted a pre-tax profit of $2 billion. In every other region it saw losses, with Asia reporting the largest loss of $381 million, driven by plummeting sales in China.
On Jan. 15, Ford and VW said they would join forces on commercial vehicles and were exploring joint development of electric and self-driving technology.
On Wednesday, sources told Reuters Germany's automakers, including VW, were in talks to jointly develop autonomous cars. VW reiterated Wednesday it was still looking for new partners, while Shanks said the companies were still in talks to close a deal. [L8N1ZN3FQ]
Ford, which ended 2018 with $23.1 billion in cash, previously said it remained committed to its operations in Europe and South America, and its losses in China would narrow this year.
Ford shares rose about 1 percent to $8.40 in extended trading.
(Reporting by Nick Carey and Ben Klayman; editing by Nick Zieminski)
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