Autos

Ford shares pop on report of CEO Jim Farley analyzing spinoff of EV business

Key Points
  • Shares of Ford jumped by more than 5% Friday morning following a report that it is weighing whether to separate its EV business from its traditional engine operations.
  • Shares rose as high as 5.4% to $18.48.
  • A spinoff of any of the operations would be in sharp contrast to Ford's largest U.S.-based rival, General Motors

In this article

Ford CEO Jim Farley speaks with reporters outside the company's world headquarters on May 19 in Dearborn, Michigan, following the debut of the electric F-150 Lightning pickup truck
Michael Wayland / CNBC

Shares of Ford Motor jumped by more than 5% during trading Friday morning following a report that CEO Jim Farley is weighing whether to separate its electric vehicle business from the automaker's traditional engine operations.

Farley wants to separate Ford's electric operations from its internal-combustion engine business and has considered spinning off one or the other, Bloomberg News reported, citing people familiar with the efforts.

Shares of Ford were up by as much as 5.4%, to $18.48, Friday, before leveling off during afternoon trading to close at $18.04 a share, up by 2.9%.

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Ford has no plans to spin off its electric vehicle business or its traditional ICE business, the company said in an emailed statement.

The report comes weeks after Bloomberg reported the company had evaluated spinning off a small portion of its EV business as a part of a reorganization in an effort to capture value that investors have been awarding some EV startups.

A spinoff of any of the operations would be in sharp contrast to Ford's largest U.S.-based rival, General Motors. GM executives have said the automaker has no plans at this time to spin off its electric vehicle business despite pressure from Wall Street to do so.

In November 2020, GM President Mark Reuss said the company analyzed the potential of a spinoff and determined it would not be the right thing for its business, citing costs as well as benefits of having the EV operations remain part of the larger company.

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