Ford at $9: A Second Chance to Buy Alan Mulally's Crisis Management
DETROIT (TheStreet) -- It appears that investors are getting one last chance to bet on the management skills of Ford (F) CEO Alan Mulally.
The opportunity seems an appealing one. Most stock buys, after all, are bets on management, and Mulally is viewed as one of the country's top CEOs. He succeeded at Boeing (B) and he has already turned around Ford once. Now, it appears that for an encore he needs to turn around Ford's operations in Europe, which the automaker said will lose $1 billion this year.
Ford closed Thursday at $8.96, down 1 cent. The last time the shares fell as low as $9 was in December 2009. Year to date, Ford shares are down 18%, while GM (GM) is down 8% -- perhaps because GM investors have not yet priced in Europe's problems.
Mulally is 67 years old and is often questioned about when he will retire. A typical non-response: He told TheStreet in April that "the best is ahead of us (and) whenever I leave, the Ford team will continue to keep Ford soaring." Ford Chairman Bill Ford has said that Mulally can stay as long as he wants.
Mulally could have left at 65 when he and Ford were on top, but he chose to stay. It does not seem likely that he would choose to walk away with Ford in the middle of a winnable battle to turn things around in Europe.
On Sept. 5, 2006, the day Mulally signed on at Ford, the shares closed at $8.39. The Detroit Three, not surprisingly, were viewed as bankruptcy candidates. Ford shares slumped as low as $1.50 in February 2009, then began a recovery. The shares ended 2009 at $10, up 334%. They reached a high of $18.97 in January 2011 before beginning another slide.
The job in Europe is difficult, but on the Ford earnings conference call Wednesday, executives made it clear that they know what has to be done.
