Ford to close all its factories in Brazil, terminate thousands of jobs

Sao Paulo: Carmaker Ford said losses exacerbated by the coronavirus epidemic would see it close its three factories in Brazil, where it has operated for a century, terminating some 5,000 jobs.

Losses continued despite progress made in phasing out unprofitable products, which included exiting the heavy truck business, cutting costs and launching new products, a company statement said.

A “sustained unfavorable economic environment and the additional burden of the pandemic made it clear that much more was necessary to create a sustainable and profitable future,” added Ford’s South America head Lyle Watters.

Alarming signs

The pandemic, said the company, “amplifies persistent industry idle capacity and slow sales that have resulted in years of significant losses.”

Ford said production will cease at its Camacari and Taubate plants immediately, with only manufacturing of some parts continuing for a few months. The Troller plant in Horizonte will operate until the fourth quarter.

Ford said it would end sales of EcoSport, Ka and T4 once inventories are sold. “With more than a century in South America and Brazil, we know these are very difficult, but necessary, actions to create a healthy and sustainable business,” said Jim Farley, Ford president and CEO.

By closing its Brazil factories, the company was moving to a “lean, asset-light business model.”

A steep drop

Ford would continue serving South America with cars sourced from Argentina, Uruguay, and other markets. New vehicle sales in Brazil retreated by more than 26 per cent in 2020 due to the health crisis, the Fenabrave automotive federation said last week.

Car sales dropped 28.57 per cent and that of buses by 33 per cent. The closures will incur one-off charges of about $4.1 billion, said Ford.

The news came as a bombshell in recession-hit Brazil, which is battling record unemployment, and elicited criticism of the inability of Jair Bolsonaro’s government to create a favourable business environment. Ford opened its first factory in Brazil in 1921, in Sao Paulo, to produce 4,700 automobiles and 360 tractors per year.

In 2019, the company closed its factory in Sao Bernardo de Campo after 52 years in operation, affecting some 2,800 workers. In November, Ford announced its return to neighbouring Uruguay after a three-decade absence, to assemble transport vehicles for the South American market, and creating 200 jobs.

Jump the gun

“This is not good news. Ford made a lot of money in Brazil… I think it could have delayed the decision and waited because our consumer market is bigger than others,” Brazil’s vice-president Hamilton Mourao told CNN Brazil.

Karl Brauer, an analyst with CarExpert.com, said there has been much consolidation in the auto sector in recent years. “General Motors, in particularly, has moved aggressively to pull out of market that didn’t make financial sense. Ford withdrawing from Brazil confirms they are willing to make the same decisions about underperforming markets.”

Ford said it would maintain its product development center in Bahia, as well as its proving ground and regional headquarters in Sao Paulo.

The company said it would work with unions to develop an “equitable and balanced plan” to mitigate the impact of the closures on workers.