Quality used to be job one at legacy automaker Ford (F), but these days, it is starting to seem a bit more like an afterthought. At least, it is hard to escape such a conclusion amid a litany of recalls and, of course, a new lawsuit that points out a “band-aid fix” Ford tried with a defective engine line. But regardless of this latest issue—or any of the others—Ford shares are still up modestly in Monday afternoon’s trading.
Confident Investing Starts Here:
- Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions
- Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter
The lawsuit in question deals with owners of Ford cars made between 2013 and 2019, reports note, and specifically, those that pack EcoBoost engines. The EcoBoost engine is a small engine, typically with between 1.5 liters and 2.0 liters of displacement. But they also came with a fatal flaw, the lawsuit alleges. For those owners, the engines were less engines and more time bombs.
The fatal flaw, the reports noted, was a key defect in coolant storage, which would allow said coolant to leak into the engine’s cylinders. That is not where engine coolant is supposed to go, and the combination of coolant going where it should not and not going where it should left a very real potential of irreparable engine failure behind. Moreover, the defect in question represented a “potential safety hazard,” reports noted, and Ford did not bother to mention this to any of the EcoBoost’s many purchasers. But Ford did try to fix the problem…in a sense. Rather than replacing an entire engine block, Ford installed “coolant level sensors,” which would let drivers know that their faulty engine needed more coolant.
Escape Plans
Remember when we got word about the 2026 Escape? This was a surprise in and of itself as earlier word suggested that the Escape was about to do just that, at least from the market. But there might be some new life in the breed, though it will not be universal.
Reports note that the 2026 Ford Escape will not be sold in six states when it comes out. Specifically, Escapeless states will be California, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington state. These states, reports note, have more stringent emissions standards than their cohort. And since the 2026 will not feature California-friendly emission systems, that means those states will be going without what may be the last model Ford Escape.
Is Ford Stock a Good Buy Right Now?
Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Hold consensus rating on F stock based on two Buys, 12 Holds and three Sells assigned in the past three months, as indicated by the graphic below. After a 13.41% loss in its share price over the past year, the average F price target of $9.71 per share implies 9.29% downside risk.
