Why Rising Commodity Prices Aren't the Real Issue at Ford

If an automaker's operating profit margin is a key indicator of how well it's doing -- and it usually is -- then it's time to have some concerns about Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F).

2015 and 2016 were Ford's most profitable years ever. Not surprisingly, the operating margins for Ford's core automotive business were pretty good during those years: 6.8% in 2015 and 6.7% in 2016. For comparison, Toyota's (NYSE: TM) margin in its fiscal 2017 was 7.2%, and General Motors' (NYSE: GM) was 7.5% in 2016. Ford's fell a little short of its two big rivals', but it was in the ballpark. Given Ford's fat profits, it wasn't much of a concern.

But Ford's automotive operating margin fell to just 5% in 2017, and its pre-tax profit was down 19% from 2016. That raises some questions, starting with this one: What's going on?

To hear Ford tell it, the answer starts with steel and aluminum prices -- but it doesn't end there.

Rising commodity prices have hit Ford hard

Ford executives argue that rising prices for key commodities like steel and aluminum have been a big factor in its shrinking profit margins. Given that, I asked Ford's chief financial officer, Bob Shanks, if the lower margin we saw in 2017 is the "new normal" -- something that investors should expect to live with for a while.

On one hand, Shanks said, one could argue that the prices of steel and aluminum slumped in 2015 and 2016 before returning to something more like "normal" in 2017. Ford spends about $10 billion a year on commodities; steel and aluminum account for about two-thirds of that; the price slump helped Ford post record profits in 2015 and 2016.

That wasn't a comforting answer: Ford's automotive operating margin in 2014 was a relatively dismal 3.4%. Is that what Ford shareholders should be expecting from now on?

But Ford knows there's more to the story

Ford knows that low margins like that won't fly in today's world. Shanks said the rising costs of key commodities is one reason why CEO Jim Hackett is so focused on improving the "fitness" of Ford's business.

Ford's fitness-improvement plan, outlined in a presentation by Hackett last fall, targets a sustainable automotive operating margin of at least 8%. Ford will get there, Hackett has said, via a combination of cost cuts and product-line shifts that aim to reduce manufacturing complexity and boost the average profitability of Ford's vehicles.

But the improvements won't happen any time soon. Ford's guidance calls for declines in operating profit and margin in 2018, in part -- but only in part because of those higher commodities costs. As Shanks sees it, Hackett's plan won't produce meaningful improvements until 2019 or 2020 at the earliest.

Will Ford's long-suffering investors be willing to wait? We'll find out.

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John Rosevear owns shares of Ford and General Motors. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Ford. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.