Ford CEO: Tariffs are 2 Billion $ Headwind

CNBC:

Farley on Tuesday said he “wouldn’t be surprised” if sales of EVs fell from a market share of around 10% to 12% this month — which is expected to be a record — to 5% after the incentive program ends.

“I think it’s going to be a vibrant industry, but it’s going to be smaller, way smaller than we thought, especially with the policy change in the tailpipe emissions, plus the $7,500 consumer incentive going away,” he said during a Ford event about promoting skilled trades and workers in Detroit. “We’re going to find out in a month. I wouldn’t be surprised that the EV sales in the U.S. go down to 5%.”

Farley said the industry learned that “partial electrification,” such as hybrids, are easier for customers to accept for the time being.

Farley said his Model e EV team is analyzing the demand for non-gas-powered vehicles each day. The company currently offers a handful of all-electric vehicles, including the F-150 Lightning pickup, which can top $90,000, and Mustang Mach-E crossover in the U.S.

Cox Automotive forecasts sales of EVs hit 410,000 during the third quarter, up 21% from a year earlier. That would easily be the highest amount of EVs ever sold in a quarter in the U.S., as well as a record 10% market share.

Cox and other industry analysts and executives expect many buyers pulled ahead plans to purchase an EV before the federal incentives sunset. 

Farley also said the federal changes mean the auto industry, including Ford, will have to adapt, saying the company will have to figure out what to do with its battery plants and EV capacity.

“We’ll fill them, but it will be more stress, because we had a four-year predictable policy,” Farley said. “Now the policy changed. … We all have to make adjustments, and it’s going to be good for the country, I believe, but it will be one more stress.”

4 thoughts on “Ford CEO: Tariffs are 2 Billion $ Headwind”


  1. Drop the tariffs on Chinese EVs and you will see EV sales surge. Detroit automakers will have no choice but to build competitive EVs or go out of business.


  2. EVs are continuing to drop in price (or, at least not go up at the rate ICE vehicles are) This means hybrids will also drop which is why hybrids will replace Ice cars before EVs do. Goodbye 70% of gas demand for cars.


      1. https://cleantechnica.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/August-2025-Norway-Passenger-Auto-Registrations-WD-800×445.png?mrf-size=m

        “EVs At A Record 98.4% Share In Norway…”
        CleanTechnica, September 9, 2025

        https://cleantechnica.com/2025/09/09/evs-at-a-record-98-4-share-in-norway-kgm-musso-arrives/

        “BEVs alone took 96.9% share”
        Last year’s 95.7% quote: “…with all other powertrains now only collecting crumbs.”

        Once people see how great BEVs are, in all weather and for essentially everyone, they let go of the range anxiety and whatever other irrational fears and prejudices have held them back, and they go Full BEVal Jakob. Now that this has happened in Norway and is happening in other countries, and EV ranges worldwide (OK, yeah, China) are constantly increasing as the cars get cheaper to buy, run, maintain, insure, and integrate, Full BEVal Junket will happen faster and faster at lower levels of B penetration.

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