USA TODAY International Edition

Ford, VW poised for big announceme­nt in Detroit

- Phoebe Wall Howard

Ford and Volkswagen are working toward a major announceme­nt on Jan. 15 during a key car industry event, the Detroit auto show, according to people close to talks about an alliance between the two automakers.

Sources in the U.S. say the situation is fluid but hopeful. “Nothing is definite,” a person familiar with the discussion­s told the Detroit Free Press.

Volkswagen and Ford have been talking since summer about areas of potential cooperatio­n.

The auto companies agreed not to discuss anything publicly this week, sources told the Free Press.

“Our memorandum of understand­ing with VW covers conversati­ons about potential collaborat­ions across a number of areas,” said Ford spokeswoma­n Jennifer Flake. “It is premature to share additional details at this time. We look forward to sharing an update soon.”

Volkswagen spokesman Mark Clothier declined to comment, saying company policy prohibits speculativ­e discussion.

Multiple sources told the Free Press that breadth and details of the expected alliance are still not final, though ongoing talks have included a cost-cutting partnershi­p involving electric and driverless technology.

Both Ford and VW sources have said in recent months that talks are proceeding as hoped. The companies also have said any partnershi­p won't be a merger or include equity stakes.

‘Big, bold move’

News of a potential announceme­nt won praise from industry analysts.

“This is a very big, bold move,” said Charles Ballard, an economics professor at Michigan State University. “The scale of the proposed alliance tells us a lot about the wrenching changes that are being wrought in the industry by trade wars and changes in technology and consumer preference­s.”

Jon Gabrielsen, a market economist who advises automakers and auto suppliers, said partnershi­ps are critical to all serious players moving forward.

“The global auto industry is rapidly becoming one in which major scale is critical,” he said. “Ford's scale is not large enough, and VW has insufficient presence in the U.S. In addition they each have significant challenges in China and in trying to be the most competitiv­e in electric vehicles and autonomous vehicles for the future.

John McElroy, host of “Autoline This Week” and the son of a retired Ford executive, said the alliance could be massive in terms of industry transforma­tion, even if the news leaks just a bit at a time.

“If VW is able to use Ford's developmen­t in autonomy and if Ford is able to use Volkswagen's developmen­t in electrification, it's not just the cost savings that is important – and that would be big – but it's getting products to the market much, much faster,” he said. “Bang! This is cost savings and time savings.”

He continued, “Additional­ly, Volkswagen is looking at having Ford build vehicles for VW in the U.S. market. That would be such a win-win for both companies.

“Volkswagen has nowhere near the market share that it should have as the largest or second largest car company in the world.”

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