Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Dearborn MI automaker (NYSE: F) at $185B 2024 revenue (+5%); F-150 #1 US truck 40+ years, Ford Pro $7.4B op profit (9 months), EV losses ongoing, $2B aluminum supply disruption competing with GM and Tesla.
Ford Motor Company is a Dearborn, Michigan-based American automaker — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: F) as an S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary component — designing, manufacturing, marketing, and financing a full range of passenger cars, trucks, and commercial vehicles under the Ford and Lincoln brands through approximately 177,000 employees worldwide. In fiscal year 2024, Ford reported annual revenue of $185 billion (+5% from 2023) and net income of $5.88 billion, with Ford Pro (the commercial vehicle division serving fleet operators, government agencies, and small businesses with F-150, Super Duty F-250/F-350/F-450, and Transit vans) generating $7.4 billion in operating profit in the first nine months alone — making Ford Pro the company's most profitable and fastest-growing business. The F-150 pickup truck remains the best-selling vehicle in the United States for more than 40 consecutive years, generating the revenue foundation that finances Ford's EV and technology investments. CEO Jim Farley's "Ford+" strategy organizes the company into three segments: Ford Blue (profitable ICE vehicle business — Bronco, Explorer, Ranger, Maverick, F-150), Ford Pro (commercial vehicles — market leadership in commercial trucks and work vans), and Ford Model e (EV program — F-150 Lightning, Mustang Mach-E, future EV products). Ford Model e accumulated approximately $5 billion in operating losses in 2023 as battery costs, pricing competition from Tesla, and slower-than-expected EV adoption compressed EV margins. A supply chain challenge in 2024-2025 — an aluminum supply disruption expected to cost up to $2 billion in EBIT — highlights Ford's exposure to raw material and trade policy risks as aluminum tariff policy creates supplier volatility.
NYSE-listed (KMB) personal care company with Huggies, Kleenex, Scott, and Cottonelle at $20.1B revenue; competing directly with P&G Pampers and Charmin for global diaper and tissue market leadership.
Kimberly-Clark is a Dallas-based global consumer goods company manufacturing personal care, tissue, and health products under the Huggies (diapers), Kleenex (facial tissues), Scott (paper towels/toilet paper), Cottonelle (bathroom tissue), Pull-Ups (training pants), U by Kotex (feminine care), and Depend (adult incontinence) brand portfolio. Listed on NYSE (NYSE: KMB), Kimberly-Clark was founded in 1872 and generated $20.1 billion in net sales in fiscal year 2024, competing directly with Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG, Pampers, Bounty, Charmin) in the diaper, tissue, and personal care categories globally.
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