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The company is exploring for nickel deposits on its Langmuir property near Timmins, Ontario; for nickel-gold-copper on its Cleaver and Douglas properties; and for molybdenum and rare earth elements at recently acquired Desrosiers property.

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Message: On a side note Ford released it earnings today...

On a side note Ford released it earnings today...

posted on Nov 02, 2009 03:10PM

Pretty good news and yes the goodwill in turning down the bailout money is huge imho.

Anyway this helps to prove the turnaround in this industry and the possible impact on steel and Nickel (SS steel).

Ford rebounds to $1-billion profit
Tom Krisher and Dee-Ann Durbin
Monday, November 02, 2009

Dearborn, Mich. — Ford Motor Co. earned $1-billion (U.S.) in the third quarter, fuelled by U.S. market share gains, cost cuts and the government's Cash for Clunkers rebates.

The Dearborn, Mich.-based auto maker on Monday reported net income of $997-million, or 29 cents per share. Ford says it now expects to be “solidly profitable” in 2011. Previously the auto maker said it would be break-even or better.

Shares of Ford, the only Detroit auto maker to dodge government aid and bankruptcy protection, rose 50 cents, or 7.1 per cent, to $7.50 in pre-market trading.

The latest results signal that Ford's turnaround is on more solid ground. The company lost more than $14.6-billion in 2008 and hasn't posted a full-year profit since 2005. While it made a profit in the second quarter, that was mainly due to debt reductions that cut its interest payments.

Its North American car and truck division – a key business – posted a pretax profit of $357-million, its first quarter in the black since early 2005. Ford cited higher pricing, lower material costs and increased market share for the improvement.

The earnings came despite an $800-million revenue drop. But Ford said it cut costs by $1-billion during the quarter.

Ford still faces obstacles in its turnaround. Last week, workers overwhelmingly rejected an agreement with the United Auto Workers that would have brought Ford's labour costs in line with rivals General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC. Workers objected to clauses limiting their right to strike and freezing entry-level wages, and felt the company was healthy enough and didn't need further concessions.

Ford also has $26.9-billion in debt, up $800-million from the second quarter.

Ford didn't quantify the impact of Cash for Clunkers, which offered buyers payments to trade in their vehicles. The program helped Ford cut costly incentives and raise production. It also won buyers; the Ford Focus and Ford Escape were among the top five sellers in the program. Ford sales were up 17 per cent in August thanks to the program.

Ford also has benefited from consumer goodwill after it declined government bailout money and didn't go into bankruptcy over the summer as GM and Chrysler did. Ford grabbed sales from its rivals, posting the largest increase in market share of any auto maker in September. Ford expects an overall gain in U.S. market share in 2009, a feat it hasn't accomplished since 1995.

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