DETROIT, June 16, 2026, 14:09 EDT.
Ford Motor Company shares fell Tuesday afternoon, with F down 1.1% at $14.61. The stock moved between $14.54 and $14.83 during the session, slipping but not dropping hard. General Motors shares also dipped, pointing to some pressure on the big carmakers, but Ford faced new headline risk of its own.
Ford is under the gun after Reuters reported it asked the U.S. Commerce Department for approval to keep bringing in the China-made Lincoln Nautilus SUV. The report noted that Ford’s software is built in the U.S. but loaded into the vehicles in China, which triggers the need for a government sign-off under current U.S. rules for connected vehicles. New software restrictions hit 2027 model-year vehicles, with hardware rules starting on 2030 models. Reuters
Ford’s stock is in focus because investors dislike regulatory uncertainty in supply chains. Even small issues with a product line can trigger bigger worries about compliance costs, possible model delays, and Ford’s room to maneuver if U.S.-China tech rules get tougher. Ford said it plans to begin importing 2027 model-year Nautilus vehicles in January, so there are only a few months to secure approval. Reuters reported that the new hardware rules could be tougher for automakers than the software requirement in the short term. Reuters
The bull story on Ford is still about cash and profit from its main businesses. In the latest quarter, Ford lifted its full-year adjusted EBIT target to $8.5 billion to $10.5 billion. Adjusted EBIT strips out some charges. The company now sees adjusted free cash flow of $5.0 billion to $6.0 billion. Free cash flow is money left after costs and capital spending. Ford Blue, its core gas and hybrid line, posted $1.9 billion in EBIT for the first quarter. Ford Pro, the commercial side, delivered $1.7 billion. shareholder.ford.com
The risk for Ford is that profitable units still have to make up for high-cost trouble spots. The Ford Model e electric-vehicle division posted a $777 million EBIT loss in the first quarter. Ford expects Model e losses of $4.0 billion to $4.5 billion for the full year. The company’s outlook is based on flat pricing in the industry and doesn’t bake in any major downturn in the U.S. economy—so Ford could take a hit if car demand drops or incentives go up. shareholder.ford.com
Ford shares are trading near fair value and still carry some risk, not coming off as a clear bargain. The stock’s 4.11% dividend yield and 15-cent quarterly payout, according to Google Finance, support its appeal for income, but the analyst view stays cautious. Out of 13 analysts, the average 12-month price target stands at $14.62—almost the same as Ford’s market price now—with just two Buys, 10 Hold ratings and one Sell. Price targets are analyst guesses on where shares could go in a year, not promises. The next key event for Ford is expected to be its second-quarter earnings report, listed by Wall Street Horizon as unconfirmed for July 29 after the bell. Investors are likely to focus on any shift in guidance, losses in electric vehicles, Ford Pro margins and details on the connected-vehicle authorization. Google Wall Street Horizon