Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) has become a major player in the huge and growing Chinese new-car market. Ford and its joint ventures sold 1.27 million vehicles in China in 2016, and those joint ventures generated $1.44 billion in equity income for the Blue Oval.
Clearly, for Ford investors, tracking the company's results in China has become significant. But Ford's China results can be confusing, given that its sales in China include vehicles from two joint ventures as well as its own global production.
Here's a quick explanation of where Ford's vehicles in China come from and how the company reports the profits it makes from selling those vehicles in the world's largest auto market.
Understanding Ford's joint ventures in China
In order to manufacture vehicles in China, global automakers are required to form joint ventures with domestic Chinese automakers. Ford currently has two joint ventures in China, and it's exploring a third.
The majority of Ford's sales in China come from vehicles built by its joint venture with Chinese automaker Changan Automobile, called Changan Ford (or CAF for short). CAF builds Ford-brand passenger cars and SUVs. Most are familiar to Americans, though a couple have different names: The Kuga is the Chinese version of the Escape SUV, and the Mondeo is China's version of the Fusion.
Only two of CAF's models are China-only products:
Ford Escort is a compact sedan based on the last-generation Ford Focus that Ford developed as an entry-level model for China. It's a simple, affordable vehicle that sells in big numbers, around 30,000 every month.
Ford Taurus is a full-size sedan, but it's different from its U.S.-market namesake. The China-market Taurus is a fairly new model that's mechanically related to the new Lincoln Continental. As you can see from the photo below, it's pretty much what you'd expect: a big Ford sedan with modern styling.
Ford's second joint venture is with Chinese automaker Jiangling Motors, a company that focuses on trucks and commercial vehicles. The joint venture, called JMC, builds the Ford Transit vans, a truck-based SUV called the Everest, and a line of light trucks under the Yusheng and JMC brand names.
There might be a third Ford joint venture in China soon. In August, Ford entered a "memorandum of understanding" with Chinese automaker Anhui Zotye Automobile (commonly called Zotye Auto). The two are exploring the idea of a joint venture that would produce a new line of all-electric passenger vehicles to be sold under a new China-only brand.
Ford also imports some vehicles into China
Taxes on imported vehicles in China are fairly high; they're intended to encourage global automakers to build the majority of their China-market vehicles in the country.
But Ford finds it worthwhile to import some specialty models into China:
All Mustangs sold in China are imported from the U.S. (The Mustang is now a global Ford, sold in over 100 world markets, but all Mustangs are built at a single factory in Michigan.)
In China, the imported Explorer is positioned as an upscale alternative to the Edge, which is built in China in a special extended-wheelbase version that seats seven. Despite its high local price (because of import taxes), Ford sells around 1,000 Explorers a month in China.
Ford is testing the pickup waters in China by importing small quantities of the high-performance F-150 Raptor pickup.
Ford builds the Focus in China in several different variations, but it doesn't build the high-performance ST and RS versions locally. Those are also imported.
Ford also imports all of the Lincoln vehicles that it sells in China, though that may change at some point in the future. Lincoln offers five models in China through a network of dealers that emphasize a high level of personal service. Those include the MKZ and Continental sedans, and the MKC, MKX, and Navigator SUVs. Lincoln's sales totals in China are still fairly small, but they've grown quickly.
How Ford reports its China sales and profits
Ford reports its sales in China monthly, generally around the tenth of the month, in a document that includes sales totals for all of its China-market models as well as some commentary from executives. You can find those reports in the "News and Events" section of Ford's site for shareholders.
Unfortunately for investors who like easy answers, Ford doesn't report one single bottom-line number for its operation in China. Financial results for China are rolled into the pretax results that Ford reports for its Asia-Pacific region as a whole. But since Ford is investing for growth (or put another way, losing money) in other parts of Asia right now, the profit total that Ford reports for Asia-Pacific only tells part of the China story.
But we can learn more by looking a little deeper, inside the slide presentation that Ford prepares for its quarterly earnings conference calls. Those presentations typically include two slides for the Asia-Pacific region; on the first, Ford has made a practice of calling out the equity income for its two Chinese joint ventures in a note on the right-hand side.
That's a number that can be compared directly to reports from some of Ford's competitors -- notably General Motors (NYSE: GM), which reports equity income for its own China joint ventures. That number plus the monthly sales reports are probably the best way for Ford shareholders in the U.S. to tell how the company is faring in China.