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Ford is struggling to stay afloat in Europe. The company is restructuring its business overseas with plans to drastically reduce its workforce. With slowing orders and weak demand for its EVs, many doubt Ford’s future in the region. A new survey underlines “how strong the doubts about Ford’s future viability in the European car market” are.

Why skepticism over Ford’s future in Europe is spreading

Last month, Ford announced plans to cut another 4,000 European jobs by 2027. The lower headcount is part of the company’s restructuring plans in the region.

Ford has incurred “significant losses” over the past few years in Europe as the “highly disruptive” market shifts to electric. The American automaker blamed the job cuts on lower-than-expected demand for EVs and a weakening economy.

Ford said the planned cuts will mainly affect Germany, while other European markets will see “minimal reductions. “

According to a new survey, skepticism about Ford’s future in Europe is rising. The study from Berlin-based Civey for Automobilwoche shows that nearly half (45%) of respondents expect poor results. Only 5% were “rather optimistic,” while another 37% were undecided.

“The results of the survey underline how strong the doubts are about Ford’s future viability on the European car market,” Civey’s Lead Customer Success Manager, Christian Riedl, explained.

Ford's-future-Europe
Ford Explorer EV production in Cologne (Source: Ford)

Riedl said the widespread skepticism is partly due to Ford’s EV strategy, or lack thereof. Civey’s expert added, “Specially with regard to electromobility and innovation, many expect Ford to take clear steps to position itself for the future.”

According to Riedl, the large number of undecided “offers the brand the opportunity to strengthen its position. ” However, that will require “a convincing vision and visible progress.”

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The electric Ford Puma Gen-E (Source: Ford)

After the first Capri EV model rolled off the assembly line at its Cologne plant in July, Ford is already slowing production. The company is reducing output of its two EV models based on Volkswagen’s MEB platform, the Electric Explorer and Capri.

Earlier this month, Ford introduced the all-electric version of its best-selling vehicle in Europe, the Puma Gen-E, as it looks to boost demand.

Electrek’s Take

Ford is facing stiff competition from Chinese EV makers like BYD, which continues to gain ground. A recent Bloomberg study pointed out BYD is quickly closing in on Ford in global deliveries. The Chinese EV leader could even surpass the American automaker by the end of the year.

BYD’s cheapest EV, the Seagull, was the best-selling vehicle (including gas-powered cars) in China again last month, beating out Tesla’s Model Y.

With a wave of new low-cost EVs arriving in China, BYD and other EV makers are looking overseas for growth. The influx of Chinese electric cars is pressuring global auto leaders to take drastic measures.

A new Nikkei report on Tuesday claimed Honda and Nissan are closing in on an EV merger to survive the transition. Which automaker will be next? Could Ford team up with another European partner or expand ties with VW? Let us know what you think in the comments below.

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Porsche is cutting nearly 2,000 jobs in Germany as its EV struggles worsen

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Porsche is cutting nearly 2,000 jobs in Germany as its EV struggles worsen

Porsche plans to cut 1,900 jobs in Germany by 2029 as it struggles with slumping EV sales. The luxury sports car maker has already warned of lower profits this year. With plans to reduce its workforce, is Porsche sounding the alarm?

Porsche to cut jobs in Germany as EV sales lag

After announcing last week that it expects profit margins of around 10% to 12% this year, significantly lower than its long-term 20% target, Porsche said it would launch new internal combustion (ICE) and plug-in hybrid (PHEV) vehicles in response.

The company warned that developing the new models and other battery-related projects would cost an extra 800 million euros ($830,000) in 2025.

It looks like the situation could be even worse than expected. Porsche said it would cut 1,900 jobs at two German plants by 2029 (via Bloomberg), blaming “challenging geopolitical and economic conditions.” The sites include Porsche’s Zuffenhausen and Weissach plants, where it aims to reduce around 15% of the workforce.

The job cuts are expected to be voluntary, including through early retirement and layoff packages. A job security agreement is still in effect for employees in Germany until 2030.

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Porsche Macan EV (Source: Porsche)

Porshe also plans to take a “restrictive approach” to hiring, hinting growth could be slower over the next few years.

Porsche’s global deliveries dropped 3% last year, driven by a sharp decline in China, one of its most profitable markets in recent years.

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New 2025 Porsche Taycan GTS (Source: Porsche)

As domestic EV makers like BYD, XPeng, Li Auto, Geely, and others gain momentum with advanced new models, foreign automakers continue to get squeezed out of the market.

A report from Germany’s Handelsblatt suggested other Volkswagen-owned brands could follow Porsche’s lead by introducing more ICE and PHEV models. The Volkswagen Golf, T-Roc, Tiguan, and Audi A3 are potential candidates, but we reportedly won’t see them until after 2030.

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2025 Porsche Taycan (Source: Porsche)

In an email to Bloomberg, the company confirmed that “Volkswagen has not changed its plans to phase out the combustion engine in Europe by the early 2030s,” adding it will “react flexibly to possible market changes.”

Electrek’s Take

While Volkswagen, Porsche, and most leading global automakers have cited slowing demand for EVs, the numbers prove otherwise.

According to Rho Motion, 1.3 million electric vehicles were sold globally in January 2025. Although that’s down from the record 1.9 million in December due to typical seasonality, the market has grown 18% from January 2024.

While Porsche continues investing in outdated gas-powered vehicles, EV leaders like BYD are doubling down on software, AI, connectivity, smart driving features, and other tech that buyers are looking for.

BYD just launched 21 of its best-selling vehicles this week with its new “Gods Eye” smart driving system for free. Although BYD is best known for its affordable EVs, like the Seagull and Dolphin, it’s expanding into Porsche territory with several new luxury models under its Denza and Yangwang brands rolling out. And BYD is only one example. Several Chinese EV makers, such as XPeng and NIO, are also expanding, with new models arriving.

Can Porsche keep up? Or will it continue falling behind as the global market shifts to electric vehicles? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

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Trump metal tariffs could slow data center growth and disrupt power grid, analyst says

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Trump metal tariffs could slow data center growth and disrupt power grid, analyst says

The old economy is still very much out of favor right now, says Carlyle's Jeff Currie

President Donald Trump‘s steel and aluminum tariffs could slow data center growth by exacerbating the shortage of key components in the electric grid, according to a leading commodity analyst at Carlyle.

Big Tech missed Wall Street expectations for their cloud segments last week due in part to a shortage of transformers, said Jeff Currie, chief strategy officer of energy pathways at Carlyle.

Transformers are crucial pieces of equipment that ramp the voltage of electricity up and down, enabling its distribution from power plants to end customers such as data centers.

“What are transformers? They’re just big chunks of metal,” Currie told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday. “So if you put tariffs disrupting supply chains it just aggravates that situation.”

Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft missed revenue targets for their cloud segments in their most recent quarterly financial results, sending their stocks lower. Microsoft’s Azure cloud business has been struggling with supply shortages. Demand for Alphabet’s AI products is exceeding available capacity.

“We are in a tight supply-demand situation, working very hard to bring more capacity online,” Anat Ashkenazi, Alphabet’s chief financial officer, told investors on the company’s Feb. 4 earnings call.

The world’s largest transformer manufacturer, Hitachi Energy, warned late last year that the industry is overwhelmed with demand for the equipment.

“Ramping up capacity is definitely an issue. It’s not easy and it will probably not ramp up fast enough,” CEO Andreas Schierenbeck told The Financial Times in a Nov. 3 interview. Schierenbeck told the FT that utilities that need transformers would have to wait up to four years if they don’t already have one reserved.

Transformer capacity might need to more than double or triple through 2050 compared with 2021 levels to keep up with demand as infrastructure ages and the economy is electrified, according to a study published in March 2024 by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

Trump’s aluminum tariffs could also disrupt the grid by bringing manufacturing of the energy-intensive metal back to the U.S., Currie said.

“If you think AI is power intensive, aluminum is a whole different world,” Currie said. “It is six times more power intensive than AI data centers. So bringing it onshore in an environment in which AI data centers are already expected to consume any excess power, this would be incredibly disruptive to power grids.”

“There is a reason it was outsourced to begin with,” said the analyst, who headed up commodities research at Goldman Sachs for decades. He is known for bold, and often bullish, calls on oil prices, including his predictions of a China-driven surge in the 2000s.

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Tesla Takeover: protests planned at Tesla stores globally this weekend

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Tesla Takeover: protests planned at Tesla stores globally this weekend

Tesla is being targeted by protests organized at its stores around the globe. The demonstrations planned for this Saturday appear to be a grassroots movement without a clear goal or leadership.

The protestors are calling it the “Tesla Takeover”.

The movement appears to have started on Bluesky, a social media platform that spun off of Twitter before Elon Musk bought it and turned it into X.

Several bigger accounts on Bluesky, including Anonymous, the infamous hacker group, have promoted the effort.

As stated in the post, the main goal appears to be protesting Elon Musk, who is the CEO of Tesla and only owns 13% of the company, but he is seen as having complete control over the automaker.

Many people believe that it is warranted to target Tesla to protest Musk because he used his wealth from the company to acquire Twitter and finance Donald Trump’s campaign, which both resulted in what many see as a takeover of the US government by the wannabe technocrat.

Ralph Ballart, a long-time Tesla owner and Electrek reader, made us aware of the planned protests. He planned to attend the rally at his local Tesla store in California, and he shared his personal reason for wanting to boycott Tesla:

I have a 2015 Model S and the only reason I want Tesla sales to decline is to get Musk out as CEO and get someone like JB Straubel to replace him.

Straubel is a Tesla co-founder and long-time CTO who left in 2019 to found Redwood Materials. More recently, he joined Tesla’s board of directors.

Other than Anonymous, there doesn’t seem to be any organization behind the protests. People are promoting them locally to get activists at Tesla stores worldwide on Saturday at 11AM.

They are using the hashtag #TeslaTakeover, which is ironic because it used to be the name of a Tesla event organized by John Stringer, one of Musk’s biggest shills.

As we recently reported, Tesla stores around the world have been targets of vandals lately to protest against Musk.

However, in this case, it seems that the protesters are planning to stay civil and exercise their freedom of speech – encouraging people to boycott Tesla to send a message to Musk.

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