Mon, May 28, 2012, 11:40 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Ford to add $3.8B to pension plans this year

    Ford Motor to add $3.8 billion to pension plans this year; raises pay of directors

    RELATED QUOTES

    SymbolPriceChange
    F10.600.01
    Fantasy Finance

    DETROIT (AP) -- Ford Motor Co. will pump $3.8 billion into its global pension plans this year as it tries to get them closer to fully funding their obligations.

    The company also raised the annual pay for its 16 directors by 25 percent to $250,000, according to its annual report filed Tuesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Ford said it will put $2 billion into the U.S. pension plan, make $350 million in benefit payments and put the remaining $1.45 billion into other plans across the globe. As of Dec. 31, the U.S. plan was $9.4 billion short of its obligations, while global plans, which include the U.S., were short by $15.4 billion, the report said.

    The company said that it expects the global funds to be fully funded during the next few years based on long-term investments and company contributions.

    The U.S. plan was worth $39.4 billion at the end of last year, while plans outside the U.S. were worth $19.2 billion.

    Ford said it plans to re-balance the pension assets to cut risk over the next several years, with the goal of placing 80 percent of the money in fixed-income investments and 20 percent in growth investments.

    The Dearborn, Mich., company said it gave the 16 directors a raise after finding out that they were paid less than the median level paid at similar companies. The directors are required to take $150,000 of their compensation in company stock.

    Ford directors made $200,000 per year until July of 2006, when the pay was cut to $100,000 as the company was headed into financial trouble. Cash payments were eliminated in 2009, and the $200,000 annual compensation figure was reinstated in 2010, company spokesman Todd Nissen said.

    The board also increased the annual consulting fee paid to Edsel Ford II, great-grandson of company founder Henry Ford, for work in the community, motor sports, dealer relations and education. Edsel Ford will get $650,000 per year. He had received $500,000 per year in an agreement that began in 1999, Nissen said.

    (This version CORRECTS Corrects third paragraph to read $350 million in benefit payments.)

     

    21 comments

    • doug  •  3 months ago
      A real American company!!
    • DaveinDallas  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
      A great American company!
    • Average Joe  •  3 months ago
      No taxpayer money involved. Isn't that the way it's supposed to be? Go Ford!
    • Denise  •  Livonia, Michigan  •  3 months ago
      People should be supporting Ford more.....the job we save could be our own
    • K Mein  •  3 months ago
      Looks like Ford is doing a lot of things right!.....my next new car will be a Ford.
    • w  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
      I drive a Ford 100% because they refused the bailout
    • Michigan Guy  •  3 months ago
      I am retired. For the last 20 years of my working years I sold Fords. They make a great product. Great to see that they are living up to the commitments to their retirees.
    • H The Frog  •  3 months ago
      Ford is really a special & model company!
    • asskicker  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      Now if they could only get Lincoin going.
    • Wal_ie  •  Grand Junction, Colorado  •  3 months ago
      Yea, I own Ford! :-)
      • Wal_ie 3 months ago
        Well I own a ford LOL and stock also.
    • Who am I  •  3 months ago
      I drive a Ford product, can I have a share of the bonus?
    • Charlene  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 months ago
      So, the board salary is based on the median paid at other companies and not on performance. No wonder that salaries are so absurd. All of the board members have full time jobs or are serving on serveral other boards. They meet four times a year and don't have to do anything except show up. What a racket. Almost as good as being the US president or a congressman.
    • Sense  •  Mansfield, Ohio  •  3 months ago
      And my dividend is coming when? It's in the mail? ANybodu know when the last dividend was paid out?
      • Michigan Guy 3 months ago
        Any time you invest in the stock market you take your chances. Great to see that Ford is looking out for their employees and retirees.
      • Average Joe 3 months ago
        Don't like it? Sell the stock. Now how hard was that?
      • jacob 3 months ago
        I believe that a dividend is being paid in March.....nickle a share.
    • Sense  •  Mansfield, Ohio  •  3 months ago
      the keypad just ate me.
    • Count Demoney  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
      adding or putting back?
    • Tom  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      GM will add billions of tax payer money, no problem.
    • Denise  •  Livonia, Michigan  •  3 months ago
      Now the stock is tanking...thanks for nothing..
    • David N  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
      This is, of course, exactly what is wrong with American auto companies. Their capital is going to employee benefits. The japanese strategy is to spend their capital making better product. Do you want to guess who wins longterm?
    • Uiuuioppoii  •  3 months ago
      Ford builds junk.
      • sCrL 3 months ago
        Your comment is 5 years outdated.
    • H  •  3 months ago
      Ford took $5.9 billion out from the Dept of Energy, coincidentally just after the auto bailouts.

      So what difference does it make where the money come from when all that matters is that it came from teh same source. They did take our tax dollars.

      Seeing how their pension obligations was short $15 billion, it shouldn't be too hard to figure out that this company is in need of cash desperately and what better guise to use than say they are going ot retool their factories then use the rest on pensions.

      Don't mean to burst your bubble, Ford will tap into that line of credit they secured from teh gov't when they all went begging for it on Capitol Hill. Alan Mullaly was the biggest proponent for the bailout only to use it against other auto mfgs now, isn't that kind of late?
      • Average Joe 3 months ago
        No, Ford participated in a loan program (along with Tesla and Nissan) specifically to develop the next generation electric and/or hybrid cars. Unlike GM and Chrysler which used bail out money (note GM's "repayment" is in stock owned by us taxpayers) to make payroll, pay suppliers, etc. Two different sets of facts and circumstances. Nice try though.

    RATES

    Stay in touch with Yahoo! Finance

      YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER

    Subscribe

    [X]

    How to subscribe

    Roll over each section to subscribe using Add to My Yahoo! or RSS Feed feeds.

    Yahoo! News offers dozens of RSS feeds you can read in My Yahoo! or using third-party RSS news reader software. Click here to find out more about RSS and how you can use it with Yahoo! News.