Better Buy: Ford Motor Company vs. BMW AG

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After several years of strong growth, auto sales in the U.S. and other major markets are showing signs of slowing. At this point in the economic cycle, profits at many automakers are shrinking, rather than growing -- and that has put pressure on their stock prices.

For long-term-minded investors, that pressure creates some opportunities. Both Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) and BMW -- or Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (NASDAQOTH: BMWYY) -- drew investors' attention earlier in the cycle, when sales and profits were growing and their management teams appeared to be executing better than most. But shares of both companies have since fallen into slumps, as investors worry about declining profits and traditional automakers' ability to compete as new technologies transform the industries.

Both are still good companies, and I wouldn't recommend that investors sell either. But which is the better buy for new money now? Let's take a look.

How Ford and BMW compare on valuation and stock performance

BMW and Ford have both had a tough year when it comes to stock performance, but Ford's stock has been hit much worse than its German rival's. While BMW's stock is down about 18.8% from October of 2017, Ford's has been hit much harder, losing 30.4% of its value over the same period.

F Chart
F Chart

F data by YCharts. Chart shows the relative performance of Ford (F) and BMW (BMWYY) stock over the 1-year period ended Oct. 18, 2018.

When we look at valuation measures based on earnings, both stocks look cheap by historical standards. Right now, Ford is trading at about 5.1 times its trailing 12 months' earnings, while BMW is trading at a slightly richer 5.7 times trailing earnings.

Because analysts expect earnings at both automakers to fall in 2019, both look a little more richly valued when we look at today's price compared to next year's earnings: BMW is trading about 6.8 times its expected 2019 earnings right now, while Ford is trading about 6.4 times its expected 2019 result.

A black 2019 Ford F-150 Limited, a luxurious full-size pickup, on a coastal road.
A black 2019 Ford F-150 Limited, a luxurious full-size pickup, on a coastal road.

Ford's massively popular F-Series pickups are its most profitable products. Ford is determined to keep them relevant as technology changes: A hybrid F-150 is due in 2020. Image source: Ford Motor Company.

Dividends: Both are good, one is better

Both Ford and BMW pay dividends that look quite generous at today's stock prices, but Ford's lower valuation gives it the higher yield. While BMW's dividend over the last year yields a rich 5.4%, Ford's looks positively lush at a hefty 6.8%.

The two companies follow different strategies when it comes to increasing dividends. BMW has increased its dividend every year since 2009, from just 0.30 euro during that difficult year to 4.00 euros in 2017. In contrast, Ford has chosen to hold its regular dividend steady at $0.60 per year ($0.15 per quarter) since 2015, though it did pay supplemental dividends of $0.25 in 2016 and $0.05 in 2017.