Ford Motor Company
F · ARCX · Auto Manufacturers · United States
Ford Motor Company is a leading automobile manufacturer founded in 1903 and headquartered at One American Road in Dearborn, Michigan, United States. The company designs, produces, and sells a diverse lineup of vehicles, including cars, trucks, SUVs, and electric vehicles under iconic brands like Ford and Lincoln. Its product portfolio also encompasses commercial vehicles, such as the F-Series trucks, which dominate the pickup market, and innovative mobility solutions through Ford Pro for businesses. Ford Motor Company operates in the automobiles sector, focusing on internal combustion engines, hybrid powertrains, and battery electric vehicles to meet evolving consumer demands for sustainability and performance. With approximately 3.96 billion shares outstanding and a market capitalization around US$38-54 billion, it maintains a global presence through manufacturing facilities, dealership networks, and financial services via Ford Credit. The company plays a pivotal role in the automotive industry, driving advancements in autonomous driving technology, connected vehicles, and supply chain efficiencies while serving individual consumers, fleet operators, and commercial clients worldwide.
Industry
Auto Manufacturers
Consumer Cyclical sector · United States
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Supply Chain
EV Battery Supply Chain
The EV battery supply chain is shaped by three structural constraints that interact to determine who can participate and at what scale: a single battery cell requires lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese, and graphite — each sourced through its own constrained supply chain — meaning disruption to any one mineral cascades through cell production; gigafactory-scale manufacturing demands $2-5 billion in capital and two to three years to reach production quality, concentrating cell production among a small number of firms; and no single battery chemistry optimizes for energy density, safety, cost, and longevity simultaneously, forcing the system into parallel technology paths that fragment scale advantages.
Automotive Supply Chain
The automotive supply chain is shaped by three root constraints: just-in-time assembly dependency where parts must arrive in exact sequence to moving production lines, platform integration complexity where a single vehicle contains 20,000-30,000 parts sourced from hundreds of suppliers, and tooling commitment where retooling a production line requires years and billions of dollars in irreversible capital.