Door latch recall to cost Ford, cut into full-year profits
DETROIT — A pesky and growing recall of vehicles with door latches that can pop open while being driven will be so costly that Ford Motor Co. is reducing its estimate of pretax profits for the full year.
The automaker, under pressure from the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, announced Thursday that it was adding about 1.5 million cars, SUVs and vans to the recall, bringing the North America total of recalled vehicles this year to nearly 2.4 million.
The door latch trouble has dogged Ford since 2014 and has affected much of its North American model lineup. At least 3 million vehicles have been recalled due to the problem. The recalls come after a 2015 NHTSA investigation found 1,200 customer complaints about doors failing to latch.
Thursday’s expansion and an earlier recall announced on Aug. 4 will cost the company about $640 million that will go against third-quarter pretax profits, Ford said in a regulatory filing. That caused the Dearborn, Michigan, automaker to reduce its full-year pretax profit estimate to $10.2 billion. That’s lower than its most recent guidance of $10.8 billion or more.