Ford Motor Co. (F) is taking another swing at making Europe work, and this time the automaker is betting on partnerships, flexibility, and a pragmatic approach to electrification rather than rushing headlong into an all-electric future that European consumers aren't entirely ready for.
The company unveiled its latest European transformation strategy, which centers on sharpening its brand identity, cutting costs, and building what it hopes will finally be a sustainably profitable business on the continent. It's a tall order for a company that has struggled in Europe for years, but Ford is approaching it with a three-pronged plan that acknowledges both market realities and competitive pressures.
The strategy rests on expanding Ford Pro's commercial vehicle business, broadening the passenger car lineup with what Ford calls "distinctive new multi-energy models," and optimizing manufacturing operations to capture economies of scale. That "multi-energy" language is telling because it signals Ford isn't going to force customers into EVs if they're not ready. Instead, the company will offer choice across electric, hybrid, and traditional powertrains.
The Renault Deal: Sharing Platforms to Share Costs
The headline announcement is a strategic partnership with Renault Group that illustrates how even major automakers are realizing they can't go it alone in the expensive transition to electrification. Under the agreement, Ford will handle design and driving dynamics for two Ford-branded electric vehicles built on Renault's Ampere platform. The companies also signed a letter of intent to explore jointly developing and manufacturing light commercial vehicles on shared platforms.
Ford framed the partnership as combining Renault's industrial scale with Ford's product development capabilities and customer focus, which should lower costs and get vehicles to market faster. It's the kind of alliance that makes sense when development costs are soaring and profit margins are under pressure. New models from this collaboration are expected to reach showrooms in 2028.
Ford Pro: The Profit Engine
While passenger cars get the headlines, Ford emphasized that Ford Pro is the real engine of its European business. The commercial vehicle division is expanding beyond just selling trucks and vans into software and services that help businesses maximize fleet efficiency.
The company highlighted Ford Liive Uptime, a data analytics service that converts vehicle telemetry into actionable insights. According to Ford, the system delivered an estimated 820,000 additional days of vehicle uptime to European businesses in 2024. That's the kind of sticky, high-margin business that automakers desperately want as hardware becomes increasingly commoditized.
Manufacturing Adjustments and Alliance Management
Ford called out its partnerships with Renault, Volkswagen, and its longstanding joint venture with Koç Holding through Ford Otosan as critical to achieving competitive products and industrial scale. Ford Otosan supplies electric drive units from Halewood in the UK, while EVs developed through the Volkswagen alliance roll off the line at a new Electric Vehicle Centre in Cologne.
The company is also adjusting its European manufacturing footprint to support multi-energy production. Valencia remains central to the passenger vehicle strategy, while investments in Dagenham and Halewood are being leveraged for the flexibility to build different powertrain configurations.
The Competitive Context
Ford isn't operating in a vacuum. Stellantis NV (STLA) is accelerating its push into Europe's autonomous vehicle market through a partnership with Bolt, aiming to roll out fully driverless commercial vehicles and expand its market share in emerging mobility services.
Meanwhile, Tesla Inc. (TSLA) is defending its European position by launching a lower-priced Model 3 to revive demand and fend off rising competition from both established automakers and Chinese EV manufacturers.
For Ford, the challenge is executing this multi-faceted strategy while European auto markets face economic headwinds, shifting regulatory requirements, and uncertain consumer appetite for electric vehicles. The emphasis on flexibility and partnerships suggests Ford has learned from past missteps and is taking a more measured approach this time around.
F Price Action: Ford Motor shares were down 0.08% at $13.13 during premarket trading on Tuesday.