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Ford Stock Just Became Wall Street’s Surprise AI Trade. The Rally Is Getting Hard to Ignore

Ford Stock Just Became Wall Street’s Surprise AI Trade. The Rally Is Getting Hard to Ignore

Detroit, May 29, 2026, 05:03 EDT

  • Ford closed Thursday at $16.65, up 4.9%, extending its one-month gain to 34%.
  • The move has shifted attention from Ford’s core auto business to Ford Energy, its new battery energy-storage push for utilities, data centers and industrial users.
  • U.S. regular trading had not yet opened in Detroit; NYSE markets list Memorial Day, May 25, as the May holiday closure, with normal U.S. equity hours otherwise at 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern time.

Ford Motor shares go into Friday’s session near their highest levels in years, after a fresh rally tied less to pickup trucks than to a bet that the Dearborn automaker can sell battery storage into the power-hungry AI economy.

The stock closed Thursday at $16.65, up 4.9%, and is now up 34% over the past month, Barron’s reported. General Motors rose just 0.3% on Thursday and is up 7% over the same month, leaving Ford’s move looking less like a broad Detroit trade and more like a Ford-specific re-rating.

That matters now because investors are recasting part of Ford as an energy-infrastructure supplier. The auto cycle is still slow: high vehicle prices and weaker new-car demand remain a drag, but AI data centers and utilities need more storage to manage power loads, and Ford has excess battery know-how and factory capacity to sell.

Ford Energy and EDF power solutions North America said this month they signed a five-year framework agreement under which EDF can procure up to 4 gigawatt hours a year of Ford’s DC Block battery energy storage systems, or BESS — large battery units that store electricity for grid or industrial use. The agreement could total up to 20 GWh, with deliveries expected to begin in 2028.

“This agreement with EDF power solutions validates the market’s need” for a scaled storage supplier, Ford Energy President Lisa Drake said. Tristan Grimbert, chief executive of EDF power solutions North America, said “supply chain reliability and product quality are paramount.” Q4 Capital

A May 21 securities filing showed the build-out is not just a marketing line. Ford said a wholly owned unit, Ford Energy Battery LLC, acquired the Kentucky battery plants from BlueOval SK and assumed a $3.805 billion Energy Department loan tied to one of the Kentucky sites, at a 4.814% annual interest rate.

The stock move also comes against a friendly tape. The S&P 500 rose 0.6% on Thursday, the Nasdaq gained 0.9% and the Dow edged higher, according to the Associated Press. Ford still outpaced that broader market by a wide margin.

The competitive read is more complicated. Tesla is the obvious comparison because it already gets investor credit for businesses beyond cars, including energy storage. The Wall Street Journal reported that Ford’s new unit puts it into competition with Tesla and LG in storage systems, while GM has a smaller but similar investor story around energy-storage opportunities.

Analysts have started to frame the upside in non-auto terms. Morgan Stanley has estimated Ford Energy could add about $600 million of annual EBIT — earnings before interest and taxes, a common measure of operating profit — and analyst Andrew Percoco said more contracts with “high-quality customers” could move the stock closer to the firm’s bull case, TheStreet reported. TheStreet

Ford’s existing business gives the rally a base, not just a story. The company raised its 2026 adjusted EBIT outlook to $8.5 billion to $10.5 billion in April after reporting first-quarter net income of $2.5 billion on revenue of $43.3 billion, Reuters reported.

But the risk is that the market is paying early for contracts Ford has not yet won. BNP Paribas analyst James Picariello has warned about Ford’s “high quarterly earnings volatility,” while the Journal cited him saying Ford may need “five more of those types of awards” to prove demand for its 20 GWh storage target. Higher commodity costs, any stumble in F-Series production, or a fading AI-power trade could leave the stock looking like an expensive automaker again rather than a cheap energy-storage play. TheStreet

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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