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Ford’s $30,000 EV Target Faces a China Scale Gap After Record Exports
15 July 2026
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Ford’s $30,000 EV Target Faces a China Scale Gap After Record Exports

Detroit, July 15, 2026, 13:16 EDT

Ford Motor Company ’s planned low-cost electric pickup now carries a China-scale burden: Chinese automakers exported about 1.1 million vehicles in June, more than Ford sold in the United States during the entire first half. Comparing the fresh export data with Ford’s sales filing gives a hard measure of the gap behind Executive Chair Bill Ford’s latest warning.

Scale measureVehiclesPeriod
China vehicle exportsAbout 1.1 millionJune 2026
Ford U.S. vehicle sales1,006,515January–June 2026

The gap matters now because the pickup, the first model on Ford’s Universal EV Platform, is not due to reach buyers until 2027. Ford has not disclosed its name or official range, and the roughly $30,000 starting price remains a target. The clock is more visible than the product.

“We can’t expect to keep them out forever, and we have to be able to beat them at their own game,” Bill Ford said Tuesday at an Axios event. Ford supports legislation to harden U.S. restrictions on Chinese-linked vehicles, the Wall Street Journal reported. For investors, the message is that policy can buy time, but the cost gap still has to be closed on the factory floor. The Wall Street Journal

Cox Automotive estimates Ford sold 9,746 battery-electric vehicles in the second quarter. A calculation from its figures puts that 42% above the first quarter, but still 40.7% below a year earlier. The wider U.S. EV market rose 14.7% from the first quarter and fell 20.5% year on year, making Ford’s annual decline roughly twice as steep. The rebound is real, but small.

Against the market leader and a Detroit peer, Cox’s estimates as of July 9 show the gap.

U.S. EV brandQ2 sales, estimatedYear-on-year changeU.S. EV share
Tesla Inc. 124,800-13.1%50.5%
Chevrolet, General Motors Company 14,908-47.6%6.0%
Ford9,746-40.7%3.9%

The mix adds another risk. Mustang Mach-E supplied about 72% of Ford’s second-quarter EV volume, with 7,032 sales; F-150 Lightning contributed 2,421 and E-Transit 293. One crossover carried most of the recovery while Ford prepared a pickup intended to change the cost equation.

Ford says the new platform uses 20% fewer parts and makes assembly 15% faster, while a roughly $5 billion investment supports the truck and U.S. battery production. Chief Executive Jim Farley said the effort “had to be a strong, sustainable and profitable business.” Those claimed savings, more than the sticker price alone, will decide whether added volume improves earnings. Ford From the Road

Affordability is the demand hinge. EVs were about 5.8% of U.S. new-vehicle sales in the second quarter, unchanged from the first and well below the incentive-driven 10.6% peak in the third quarter of 2025, Cox said. Stephanie Valdez Streaty, its director of industry insights, said the next phase must meet expectations for “affordability, utility, performance, and ownership experience.” Cox Automotive Inc.

Ford’s legacy franchise gives it room to wait. F-Series sales reached 357,801 in the first half, more than 80,000 ahead of Chevrolet Silverado, and paid Ford Pro software subscriptions topped 900,000, up about 20%. Yet total second-quarter U.S. sales fell 10% to 549,200 as model phase-outs and a 69% drop in daily-rental volume weighed. The core business is working, but it is not untouched.

But the scale comparison can mislead if read literally: China’s total is global exports, Ford’s is U.S. sales, and Cox’s EV figures are estimates. U.S. restrictions could keep direct Chinese competition out for longer. The nearer risk is execution, since the pickup’s price is not final and Ford’s cost targets have yet to be proved in volume production.

Ford shares were up about 2% at $14.23 around 1 p.m. EDT. The company is due to report second-quarter results on July 28, when investors will look for detail on EV spending and the 2027 launch timetable. Ford has bought time, not scale.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide. Follow Jerzy Lewandowski on Google News.

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