Ford CEO Jim Farley poses with the Ford F-150 Lightning pickup truck in Dearborn, Michigan, May 19, 2021.
Rebecca Cook | Reuters

Ford Motor has no plans at this time of spinning off its electric vehicle or gasoline-powered vehicle businesses, CEO Jim Farley said Wednesday.

His comments come less than a week after Bloomberg News reported Farley wanted to separate Ford’s electric operations from its internal-combustion engine business and had considered spinning off one or the other.

“Despite the press speculation, we have no plans to spin off our electric business or our ICE business,” he said at a Wolfe Research conference. “It’s really more around focus and capabilities, expertise and talent. Those are key for Ford and this is what we’re working on.”

Some Wall Street analysts have pressured traditional automakers such as Ford and General Motors to separate their electric vehicle businesses in an effort to capitalize on valuations being awarded to Tesla, Rivian Automotive and other EV start-ups.

A Ford spokesman following the last week’s report, which cited anonymous sources, said Ford had no plans to spin off its electric vehicle business or its traditional internal combustion engine business.

Ford share jumped by more than 5% in intraday trading on the Bloomberg report. The automaker’s stock Tuesday afternoon was down by more than 4% from an intraday high of $17.73 a share. As of 2:50 p.m. Tuesday, shares were down by about 2% to $17 a share.

You May Also Like

Wall Street Week Ahead: Bond investors look for Fed to justify steepening yield curve

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Expectations that the global economy has dodged the…

McDonald’s owners group says company rejected request to delay big changes to franchise system

In this article MCD Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT A customer…

Tyson Fury hints he will retire after knocking out Dillian Whyte to retain WBC heavyweight title

LONDON, ENGLAND – APRIL 23: Tyson Fury celebrates victory as referee Mark…

Dozens of Chinese companies added to U.S. blacklist in latest Beijing rebuke

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States said on Friday it would add…