Ford CEO Mark Fields Fired In Management Shakeup

Primalzer

TCG Elite Member
Sep 14, 2006
25,259
61
Like General Motors and Fiat Chrysler, Ford Motor Company has continually failed to convince Wall Street analysts and investors of the worthiness of its stock price over the last few years. Tonight, reports indicate that situation may have cost Ford CEO Mark Fields his job at the automaker.

Forbes reports that Fields, who had been CEO of Ford since 2014, is about to be out amid a big management shakeup tied to board concerns over the company’s overall strategy and its stock price.

We reached out to Ford for comment but have not heard back yet; this report is yet unconfirmed, but Forbes said the announcement is expected to come Monday morning.

From the story:

The shakeup is a result of Executive Chairman Bill Ford and the rest of the board losing confidence in Fields’ leadership, according to people familiar with the board’s thinking. Fields replaced Alan Mulally in mid-2014, but lacked his predecessor’s ability to rally employees around a common mission or to make critical decisions about the company’s strategy.

“Without Alan, it’s back to the inmates running the asylum,” said one insider.

Directors were increasingly alarmed by the deterioration in Ford’s business, despite hefty profits from its flagship F-series pickup truck line, said people familiar with the board’s thinking.

The Wall Street Journal also reported “significant changes to the auto maker’s senior leadership team,” but the story does not note the firing of Fields. Forbes says that James P. Hackett, the head of Ford’s Smart Mobility LLC subsidiary, will take Fields’ place.

Under Fields, Ford underwent a shift toward becoming a “mobility” company focused on apps, ride-sharing and autonomous vehicles, to say nothing of big headline-making products like the new Ford GT. At the same time, that mobility strategy has often felt haphazard and ineffective; it’s safe to say FordPass hasn’t exactly transformed the way we get around.

And Ford has suffered from the same problems that its traditional American automaker contemporaries faced: namely, convincing Wall Street that its stock price was worth a damn and that it could effectively weather another recession, economic crisis or a spike in gasoline prices. (Indeed, these days Tesla is more valuable than GM is.) And in an effort to cut costs and invest in technology, Ford recently announced a layoff of some 1,400 people.

As Forbes and the Journal note, Ford’s stock price plummeted nearly 40 percent under Fields’ tenure. If this report is true, it is not hard to see why the board had simply had enough.

More on this as we get it tomorrow, but if it is true, it is probably the starkest example yet of how traditional automakers are facing existential challenges in this new era of “mobility” and technological disruption.

UPDATE: Ford confirmed the news in a press release:

Ford Motor Company today named Jim Hackett as its new president and CEO and announced key global leadership changes designed to further strengthen its core automotive business and accelerate a strategic shift to capitalize on emerging opportunities.

Hackett, 62, has a long track record of innovation and business success as CEO of Steelcase, Interim Athletic Director at the University of Michigan and executive chairman of Ford Smart Mobility LLC since March 2016.

Reporting to Executive Chairman Bill Ford, Hackett will lead Ford’s worldwide operations and 202,000 employees globally. He succeeds Mark Fields, 56, who has elected to retire from Ford after a successful 28-year career with the company.


:ford:
 

MikeyLikesIt

PHEV Enthusiast
Jun 11, 2009
2,866
727
Downers Grove
My Ford Fusion Plug-in Hybrid daily driver comes with a mobility app that lets me see the charge settings and many other things. I can even set the cabin temperature for when I think I am going to leave which is cool. It's not game changing technology, but I think it's pretty slick.

With the world going electric, I'd like to see Ford make a few more plug-in hybrids. Getting those first 20 - 30 miles of all electric has been huge for me.

But Ford and GM will always been followers, not innovators.
 

Primalzer

TCG Elite Member
Sep 14, 2006
25,259
61
My Ford Fusion Plug-in Hybrid daily driver comes with a mobility app that lets me see the charge settings and many other things. I can even set the cabin temperature for when I think I am going to leave which is cool. It's not game changing technology, but I think it's pretty slick.

With the world going electric, I'd like to see Ford make a few more plug-in hybrids. Getting those first 20 - 30 miles of all electric has been huge for me.

But Ford and GM will always been followers, not innovators.

Ford and GM were once innovators...but those times are long gone.
 

HeavyG

TCG Elite Member
TCG Premium
Apr 3, 2007
5,902
3,740
I'm not trolling. Name one other automotive CEO that has been even close to as innovative as Elon has? What CEO is setting their company for future success better than Elon?

Serious questions.

I concur

Solar X, Space X and Billionaire in the US...lots of reports dont speak about his assets in other countries......

this man is the only real player in Solar energy......
 

bimmer4life

TCG Elite Member
TCG Premium
Feb 18, 2008
5,332
8,501
Wheaton, Illinois
1400 people get laid off because of his ineptitude. Prolly made 7 figures too...fuck that Puto!
As President and Chief Executive Officer at FORD MOTOR CO, Mark Fields made $19,257,495 in total compensation. Of this total $1,787,500 was received as a salary, $2,736,000 was received as a bonus, $0 was received in stock options, $14,298,356 was awarded as stock and $435,639 came from other types of compensation.
 
Old Thread: Hello . There have been no replies in this thread for 90 days.
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant. Consider starting a new thread to get fresh replies.

Thread Info