Ford compares new low-cost EV platform to Rivian and Tesla, says rivals will turn to China

Ford is betting on smaller electric cars as the future. Its โ€œSkunkworks โ€ team is not so small, and now that the cat is out of the bag, we are learning more about Fordโ€™s new affordable platform. Ford CEO Jim Farley compared its new low-cost EV platform to Rivian and Tesla. However, Farley suggested Fordโ€™s could be even better and cheaper.

Farley revealed the Skunkworks team was developing a low-cost EV platform for its next-gen EVs in February on a media call with investors.

Although it was a small group, Farley promised it included โ€œsome of the best EV engineers in the world.โ€ The team is led by Alan Clarke, known for his work with Teslaโ€™s Model Y.

Over the past several months, Ford has added about 50 ex-Rivian employees, over 20 from Tesla, another 20 from Lucid, and several from Apple. Ford has also hired talent from eVTOL leaders like Archer Aviation, Joby, and Hyundaiโ€™s Supernal.

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Farley explained earlier this year that the team is โ€œengineering a completely different approach, a different product at a different cost with a much smaller battery and different chemistry.โ€

Ford has already said the platform will support several different types of vehicles. On Fordโ€™s Q2 earnings call this week, Farley gave us more insights on what to expect.

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Ford Mustang Mach-E (Source: Ford)

Ford says its low-cost EV platform is like Rivian, Tesla

Although the โ€œEV journey has been humbling,โ€ Farley said heโ€™s happy the company started 2.5 years ago because it will use what it learned over that time to improve its next-gen EVs.

Ford, alongside Rivian and Tesla, are โ€œthe only OEMs outside of China controlling software across all the vehicle domain,โ€ Farley said Wednesday.

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Ford F-150 Lightning infotainment (Source: Ford)

Although most are doing OTAs on vehicle entertainment, Farley explained, Ford โ€œnow has multiyear experience on updating powertrains, breaking the fundamental performance of the vehicle connectivity.โ€

Fordโ€™s leader added that with a wide-reaching portfolio, including F-150 and Pro, โ€œthe customer use case is clearly much more complicated than Rivian and Tesla.โ€

Farley believes Ford is ahead of Rivian, Tesla, and many other OEMs โ€œbecause we have more complicated platforms.โ€ And because of that, Ford has more scale.

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Rivian R1T (left) and R1S (right) electric vehicles (Source: Rivian)

โ€œThey have really designed breakthrough EV components with our own design that we think are better and cheaper,โ€ Farley explained.

Fordโ€™s BlueCruise has over 415,000 vehicles on the road enabled with hands-free driving tech. Thatโ€™s up 25% from the first quarter.

Matching Tesla and Chinese OEMs on affordability

However, Farley explained, โ€œThe second success factor is matching the cost of the Chinese OEMs and Tesla, especially on affordable EVs.โ€ Farley said Ford is designing a โ€œsuper efficient platform leveraging innovation across our product development, supply chain and manufacturing teams.โ€

Ford will focus on two segments: work and adventure. Smaller, more affordable vehicles use fewer battery materials, reducing costs and improving margins.

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Ford Mustang Mach-E Rally (Source: Ford)

Farley said this is already โ€œsupercharging the lower cost of ownership that EVs have already worked out.โ€

Ford will leverage the platform โ€œacross many top hats,โ€ as Farley described. This will drive scale while also growing its software business.

With its vehicles increasingly becoming โ€œgeneral-purpose computers,โ€ Ford is creating โ€œpowerful, connected, ever-improving customized experiences.โ€

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Fordโ€™s new Capri EV interior for Europe (Source: Ford)

Without Chinaโ€™s help?

When Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jones asked if Ford could bring a low-cost EV to market profitability without help from China, Farley said Ford made a bet on CATL many years ago.

Ford will localize LFP battery cells in Michigan with CATLโ€™s help. Farley explained Volkswagenโ€™s move to use XPengโ€™s platform โ€œis not our strategy.โ€ Fordโ€™s CEO said its partnership strategy โ€œwill be on the component side going deep into the supply chain for IP.โ€

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New Ford Puma (Source: Ford of Europe)

Farley added, โ€œThe true fitness test for EV profitability will be these small vehicles.โ€ He believes โ€œmany of our competitors will turn to their Chinese either independent companies or partners to basically use their platform globally.โ€

The comments come after Fordโ€™s Model e EV business lost another $1.1 billion in the second quarter. Ford has lost $2.5 billion on its EVs through the first half of 2024. The automaker is betting on its new low-cost EV platform to turn things around.

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