NEW YORK, July 12, 2026, 13:06 (EDT)
Ford Motor Company NYSE:F has a smaller Canadian labor risk going into Monday after it landed a tentative three-year deal with Unifor for over 5,000 employees. The sides struck the agreement over the weekend, beating the September 20 contract expiration by more than two months. The pact needs union members to sign off.
Timing is a factor here. Ford finished Friday at $14.00, up 4.8% since the July 2 close. That came even as the company posted a 10.3% fall in Q2 U.S. sales to 549,200 vehicles—limited F-150 supply hit deliveries.
| Market comparison | July 10 close | Move from July 2 close |
|---|---|---|
| Ford Motor NYSE:F | $14.00 | up 4.8% |
| General Motors NYSE:GM | $77.85 | up 2.4% |
| S&P 500 | 7,575.39 | gained 1.2% |
That relative gain stands out. Investors appear to have seen Ford’s sales drop as a supply issue, not a signal that demand is weakening. Ford moved 357,801 F-Series trucks in the first half, topping the Chevrolet Silverado by over 80,000. The company expects supply to improve in the second half. “We are exactly where we need to be to deliver on our second-half goals,” Ford Blue and Model e president Andrew Frick said this month. Ford From the Road
Unifor counts about 5,150 workers covered by the contract, with staff from Oakville Assembly and Windsor-area engine sites included. Union members will vote to ratify the deal from July 17 to 19. “This deal comes at a vital time for Canada’s auto workers and our domestic industry,” Unifor President Lana Payne said. Unifor
Ford landed the pattern deal, a contract blueprint Unifor plans to bring to GM and Stellantis NYSE:STLA negotiations. Out of Unifor’s almost 19,000 autoworker members at the three companies, about 5,150 are at Ford—roughly 27%. The rest, about 73%, could see their contracts shaped by what Ford settled for.
Ford shares don’t have much cushion for weakness. The stock is at $14.00, less than 2% under the FactSet analyst median target of $14.25. The consensus rating is “hold.” Wall Street looks for 35 cents in Q2 EPS when Ford reports on July 28. The Wall Street Journal
Three more tests are lined up this week before the ratification outcome.
| Date | Event | Read-through for Ford investors |
|---|---|---|
| Tuesday, July 14 | June Consumer Price Index out at 08:30 EDT | If CPI runs hot, auto loan costs may stay high |
| Thursday, July 16 | June U.S. retail sales posted at 08:30 EDT | Gives a read on buyers’ willingness for bigger-ticket spending |
| Friday, July 17 | June industrial production at 09:15 EDT | Shows latest manufacturing and output trends |
| July 17-19 | Unifor ratification meetings | Will indicate if labor cloud over Ford is lifted |
But the deal doesn’t yet move the earnings needle. Ford said it’s holding back contract details during the ratification process, so investors still can’t pin down labor costs. If workers vote it down, or the contract ends up more expensive, or F-Series stockpiles don’t rebound, or if inflation keeps loans pricey, some of last week’s gains could snap back.
Traders are set to watch Monday’s action to see if the pact pushes sentiment toward a smoother second half. The tougher test is with the member vote and when Ford reports July 28—truck supply has to move, and selling needs to outpace any labor headwind.