DETROIT — Stubbornly high warranty expenses and lagging cost-cutting efforts are holding back Ford Motor Co.'s profits this year, causing the company to lower its full-year earnings guidance.
That pushed the company's stock price down 6% in trading after Monday's closing bell.
The Dearborn, Michigan, automaker, which reported third-quarter earnings Monday, said its net profit tumbled nearly 26% as it took $1 billion in accounting charges to write down assets for a canceled three-row electric SUV.
Ford said it made $892 million from July through September, compared with $1.2 billion it made a year earlier.
But excluding the one-time items, the company made an adjusted pretax profit of $2.6 billion, or 49 cents per share. That beat analyst estimates of 46 cents, according to FactSet.
Revenue rose 5.5% to $46.2 billion, also beating Wall Street predictions.
Ford reduced its full-year pretax income guidance to $10 billion, at the low end of the $10 billion to $12 billion it expected at the end of the second quarter, spooking investors.
''Cost, especially warranty, has held back our earnings power, but as we bend that curve, there is significant financial upside for investors,'' CEO Jim Farley told analysts on a conference call.