Ford ousts CEO, vows to catch up on self-driving cars
Longtime chief of office furniture giant Steelcase will take the wheel
DEARBORN, Mich. — In a shake-up reflecting the pressures on the U.S. auto industry, Ford Motor Co. replaced its chief executive, Mark Fields, on Monday and vowed to catch up in the race to build self-driving cars and define a new era in personal mobility.
The company said Jim Hackett, who had overseen the Ford subsidiary that works on autonomous vehicles, would immediately take the reins from Fields.
During Fields’ three-year tenure — a period when Ford’s shares dropped 40 percent — he came under fire from investors and the company’s board for failing to expand the company’s core auto business and for lagging in developing the high-tech cars of the future.
Ford added 23 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $11.10 Monday. The stock is down 8.5 percent this year.
Hackett was introduced at a news conference at Ford’s headquarters here at which he acknowledged the need to change both perception and execution.
“I do think that the vision and our role in that future has to be better,” he said. “I know that that can be better, and I know that we can build better enthusiasm for Ford.”
The board’s decision to change management was made Friday, eight days after
Fields had been sharply criticized during the company’s annual shareholders meeting for Ford’s deteriorating financial results.
Bill Ford, the company’s chairman, said in an interview that he had subsequently met with Fields and that they had “decided mutually” that Fields would retire after 28 years with the company.
That cleared the way for the board to offer the top job to Hackett, 62, a longtime chief of the office furniture giant Steelcase and a former Ford director, who joined the company’s operational ranks last year as head of its “smart mobility” operation, which includes driverless technology.
Great-grandfather
“Extraordinary times require transformational leadership, and that’s what Jim has been his entire career,” said Ford, whose great-grandfather was Henry Ford, the company’s founder.
Hackett said the board had given him a free hand to transform the nation’s No. 2 automaker, including seeking alliances with Silicon Valley firms, changing its product lineup, and divesting itself of unprofitable global operations.
“I’ve got all the opportunity to make the decisions we need and a great team to help me get there,” Hackett said in an interview.
Fields, 56, could not be reached for comment. As recently as last week, he had been trying to strengthen Ford’s bottom line by cutting 1,400 salaried jobs.
But, unable to reverse the stock decline, he ran out of time to carry out his strategy to cut costs and expand Ford’s lineup of trucks and sport utility vehicles, while also investing in autonomous and electric vehicles.
Under Fields, Ford achieved a record pretax profit of $10.8 billion in 2015 as SUV and truck sales soared in the U.S. Fields resurrected Ford’s luxury Lincoln brand and grew sales in China. His bet on using aluminum for Ford’s trucks paid off in terms of better fuel economy and strong sales. Fields opened an office in Silicon Valley to hire talented young researchers and scout out promising startups.
But there were rumblings that Fields wasn’t focused enough on Ford’s core business. Popular products like the Fusion sedan and Escape SUV grew dated. Ford lagged behind rivals in bringing long-range electric cars to the market. Ford couldn’t pivot quickly; when subcompact SUV sales boomed in the U.S., for example, it didn’t bring over a small SUV being sold in other regions.
Despite spending heavily on self-driving research, Ford was struggling to keep pace with larger automakers such as General Motors and tech giants like Google, both of which have been testing self-driving vehicles. Ford is promising to have a fully autonomous vehicle on the road by 2021. Ride-sharing Uber also has smart-car ambitions.
The upstart vehicle maker Tesla, which recently surpassed GM and Ford in market capitalization, is bringing its first massmarket electric model to market this year.
‘One foot in the future’
At the annual meeting on May 11, Fields said Ford was capable of staying competitive in the current market for new vehicles, while also “keeping one foot in the future” of an industry heading toward autonomous, battery-powered cars.
Yet Ford is showing troubling signs of decline. Profit in the first quarter dropped more than 30 percent from a year earlier, and the company’s market share in the United States fell slightly.
And with auto sales in the U.S. cooling off after two record years, Ford faces a tough balancing act if it is to maintain strong results in North America while investing in projects for the future.
Fields was also at the forefront of an abortive plan to build a $1.6 billion assembly plant in Mexico for small cars. The project was abandoned early this year as sales stalled and President Donald Trump’s election brought pressure on Ford to make more vehicles in the United States.
Hackett said at the news conference that he endorsed the decision to abandon the Mexico plant, but added, “We made that decision not for political reasons but for business decisions, and they are still sound today.”
Moved jobs to Mexico
Hackett was the CEO of Steelcase for 20 years. He is credited with transforming that company, in part by predicting the shift away from cubicles and into open office plans. He cut thousands of jobs and moved furniture production from the U.S. to Mexico to stem massive losses at the company.
Hackett said that while he wanted to change Ford’s culture to encourage and support innovation, he would also push the organization to fix current problems in the marketplace.
Ford’s car sales are down 25 percent this year — far more than the overall industry decline in the car segment.
“There are categories of cars that need to hit margin targets,” Hackett said, adding that he had been given “no restrictions” on how to improve earnings.