Ford set to bump up SUV output

Plant turning out big machines digs deep to make more

Ford Motor Co. said Tuesday that it will shift 550 jobs to its Kentucky Truck Plant to increase production of its Expedition, like the one above, and Lincoln Navigator to meet growing demand.
Ford Motor Co. said Tuesday that it will shift 550 jobs to its Kentucky Truck Plant to increase production of its Expedition, like the one above, and Lincoln Navigator to meet growing demand.

Ford is increasing production of its biggest, highly lucrative sport utility vehicles for the second time in two years at a U.S. factory already bursting at the seams.

The automaker is increasing Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator output by 20 percent -- about 20,000 additional SUVs a year -- by speeding up the assembly line at the Kentucky Truck Plant in Louisville and redesigning it so workers can manufacture the SUVs simultaneously. Ford executives declined to say how much the automaker is spending, but an upgrade of the same Kentucky plant announced in February last year cost $25 million and followed a $900 million upgrade the year before.

The hot-selling SUVs are critical to Ford's future because they generate profit per vehicle that analysts say can exceed $20,000. That helps finance the billions Ford is pouring into electric and self-driving vehicles that are considered the cars of tomorrow. While Ford won't be adding factory jobs, it's picked a fortuitous time to tout the expansion, with rival General Motors Co. drawing fresh ire from President Donald Trump for closing factories.

"This is one of our highest-volume plants in the world," John Savona, Ford's vice president of North American manufacturing, told reporters at the company's headquarters in Dearborn, Mich. Ford "needed to figure out how to increase production in a plant that was already operating at top speed."

Navigator sales soared 70 percent last year, thanks to a redesign. Sales of the Expedition, revamped for the first time since 2003, rose 5.4 percent, according to researcher Autodata Corp. Perhaps most importantly, the average selling price of an Expedition climbed about $11,700 to $62,700.

Ford lacks the space to knock down walls and expand the factory, so it's digging pits along the assembly line for workers to attach components such as running boards from below, while other workers above install interior parts. The company also is speeding up the line so it can crank out more than 60 SUVs an hour, Savona said.

Ford will make the changes in July while the plant is on summer shutdown for two weeks.

"We had to go up and down because we didn't have space to actually do brick and mortar to put another line in," Savona said. "We had to really get creative."

Ford also will add 550 workers to the truck plant, but they'll come from the automaker's neighboring Louisville Assembly Plant, which makes the small Escape SUV.

The automaker is rolling out a redesigned Escape this year aimed at reversing the sales slide of its aging model. Savona declined to say if Ford eventually will need to replace the workers that plant is losing to support the Expedition and Navigator.

The Kentucky Truck Plant, one of Ford's largest factories in North America, has about 8,100 hourly workers and the Louisville plant has about 4,400 hourly employees.

With Trump assailing GM on Twitter for three days straight over ceasing production at a car factory in Ohio, Savona made a point to say Ford is "committed to manufacturing in the United States, as we have for more than 100 years."

But as part of an $11 billion restructuring, Ford has begun dismissing salaried employees, and a Morgan Stanley analyst has predicted the cuts could reach 25,000 worldwide. Net income fell by more than half last year, as the company lost money in every regional market except North America, where it has become increasingly dependent on big F-Series trucks and SUVs.

GM continues to dominate the U.S. retail market for large SUVs with the Chevrolet Tahoe, Suburban and GMC Yukon, which accounted for a combined segment share of more than 70 percent last year, according to Ford. But that's down about 5 points from 2017, as Expedition's share rose to 17.5 percent in 2018, from 11.9 percent in 2017.

"We are a challenger brand in this segment as the competition had been continually investing in product, and we had not had the same entire all-new product until now," said Matt VanDyke, director of U.S. marketing for Ford. "We're committed to growing this in the next year as we have more availability."

To further stoke demand for the Expedition, Ford is rolling out a new ad campaign with the slogan: "Built to be a better big." A commercial dubbed "Leave no man behind" will appear during the NCAA men's basketball tournament and other prime-time programming showing the Expedition carrying eight people, while pulling a trailer with two horses.

"In this segment, we really want to emphasize big," VanDyke said. "But better big."

Information for this article was contributed by Bruce Schreiner of The Associated Press.

Business on 03/20/2019

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