TSLA409.945-12.29499%
GM74.190-0.67%
F13.225-0.175%
RIVN13.285-0.505%
CYD49.410-0.59%
HMC25.245-0.935%
TM187.565-3.115%
CVNA67.2200.05%
PAG160.870-1.31%
LAD268.4206.5%
AN184.9750.82501%
GPI316.7903.17%
ABG179.2850.115%
SAH73.430-0.53%
TSLA409.945-12.29499%
GM74.190-0.67%
F13.225-0.175%
RIVN13.285-0.505%
CYD49.410-0.59%
HMC25.245-0.935%
TM187.565-3.115%
CVNA67.2200.05%
PAG160.870-1.31%
LAD268.4206.5%
AN184.9750.82501%
GPI316.7903.17%
ABG179.2850.115%
SAH73.430-0.53%
TSLA409.945-12.29499%
GM74.190-0.67%
F13.225-0.175%
RIVN13.285-0.505%
CYD49.410-0.59%
HMC25.245-0.935%
TM187.565-3.115%
CVNA67.2200.05%
PAG160.870-1.31%
LAD268.4206.5%
AN184.9750.82501%
GPI316.7903.17%
ABG179.2850.115%
SAH73.430-0.53%

Ford expects $600M pretax pension-related Q4 charges

The automaker says the charge will affect net income but not adjusted results or cash flow and will not change future pension funding plans.

Ford is changing its successful employee-pricing-for-all campaign into a new promotion aimed at reducing the upfront cost of ownership

On the Dash:

  • Ford’s $600 million pretax charge will lower reported earnings but leave adjusted results and cash unchanged.
  • Pension plans remain fully funded, with no impact on expected 2026 contributions.
  • The charge adds to a broader wave of special items tied to Ford’s strategic and investment reset.

On Friday, Ford said it will report pretax charges of $600 million in its fourth quarter due to adjustments in employee pension plans and other postretirement benefits. 

The Detroit automaker said the charges will reduce reported net income but will not impact adjusted earnings or cash flow. The total is split between domestic pension plans and those outside the United States.

On an after-tax basis, Ford said the remeasurement loss is expected to lower net income by about $500 million, reflecting tax effects across jurisdictions where gains and losses occurred.

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Ford said the remeasurement loss for its U.S. plans was largely driven by actuarial results that differed from prior assumptions. For non-U.S. plans, the charge was primarily tied to updated measurement assumptions, including longer life expectancy.

The company said its retirement plans remain fully funded and that the charges do not change its expectations for pension contributions in 2026.

The pension-related charge adds to approximately $19.5 billion in special items Ford disclosed last month, most of which are expected to be recorded in the fourth quarter. Those previously announced items are tied to a restructuring of the company’s business priorities and a pullback in all-electric vehicle investments.

Automakers commonly exclude one-time or special charges from adjusted financial results to provide investors with a clearer view of ongoing operations.

Ford is scheduled to report its fourth-quarter results after markets close on Feb. 10.

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