Yahoo Finance Presents: Ford CEO Jim Farley

Ford CEO Jim Farley joins Yahoo Finance editor-at-large and anchor Brian Sozzi to discuss the new era of electric vehicle making at the storied auto giant, the start of F-150 Lightning production in Detroit, the battle against Elon Musk’s Tesla and why this moment is extra special to Farley and his family.

Video Transcript

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BRIAN SOZZI: All right, joining us now is Ford's CEO Jim Farley. Jim, always great to get some time with you. Before we get going and talk about the Lightning, am I right-- you are powering this interview on your end from your electric Lightning truck?

JIM FARLEY: Yeah, It's unbelievable. We lost power at the Rouge, so now we're running all the cameras and the lights off our pro power onboard. So we can do it for about three days in case we need it.

BRIAN SOZZI: That is impressive there. That is very impressive. I want to talk to you a little bit about the Lightning here. It's a big day. First ones are rolling off the production line, big momentous day for Ford. Why are you comparing this to the launch of the Model T?

JIM FARLEY: Because it's a new era for Ford. We're the leader in light duty pickups. F-150's been the leader-- leading truck and actually the leading vehicle sold in the United States for decades now. And electrifying is just a huge moment for the company to go into this electric digital era. You could drive hands-free with the vehicle, we've got over-the-air updates of the vehicle, it's zero emissions, power your house or an interview for a few days-- we've never really had a product this innovative in a core segment.

Starts at $39 grand. So it's not a technology for the few. It's a technology for the masses, like the Model T was. And it's a really big change for our company.

BRIAN SOZZI: And, Jim, what's the mood like in the plant right now on a day like this?

JIM FARLEY: It's-- I just-- I've never felt like anything like this in the car business. I guess maybe it feels like that way [INAUDIBLE] during a launch. But I mean, the feeling of unity where our factory workers-- because we make every truck in the US. So we bet on the US.

Having our factory workers feel like they're going to have a job for decades to come because they're working on a vehicle with future technology, all the engineers have spent three years doing this in quiet, the scale of this-- we built 2,000 vehicles in the last couple of weeks. Some of our competitors haven't done that in total. It's really electric. It's really something special. Lightning has struck in the Rouge plant.

BRIAN SOZZI: I promise not to keep you for three days and test out the power on that truck. This is not going to be a three-day interview here, Jim. But I want to get into the specs of the truck and the outlook for Ford, but I didn't realize this about you and your own personal story. Your grandfather started at Ford in 1918. Talk to us a little bit about his journey at Ford and what this means to you.