PungoteagueDave
Well-known member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2025
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 952
- Reaction score
- 1,043
- Location
- Boynton Beach
- Vehicles
- ‘25 Tesla Cybertruck, ‘26 Tesla MY Launch, ‘13 Porsche C4S, ‘26 BMW R1300 GSA
- Occupation
- retired
Ford has always produced positive gross margin on its EVs. Not one Mach E or Lightning has been sold at a production cost loss. The division has losses due to accounting rules for R&D, G&A, depreciation. This contrasts with Rivian which spends more on every vehicle in actual content costs than it can sell them for, with an average historical loss of about $50k/unit. Yes, I actually read the 10-Q’s for each company in question.Like I said, there are many reasons why vehicle sales fluctuate through the year. I only rely on each years sales data to determine "best-selling". Plus, the Lightning has been in production for years, it should be selling two to three times the Cybertruck by now. But it's an outdated vehicle, so I expect sales to taper off for the second half of the year.
And just like Rivian, Ford is selling the Lightnings below the cost to produce. So, those sales are costing Ford a lot of money. If I have a dairy chain, and it costs me $3.00 on average, to produce a gallon of milk, and I sell each gallon for $2.00 and sell millions of gallons, can I claim that people prefer my milk over Dairygold? I suppose I could claim the best-selling milk in America, but what good does that do me if the more I sell, the more I lose?
This is why Cybertruck sales will pass up Lighting sales by the end of the year. Ford cannot afford to sell more Lightnings.
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