Ford Shuts Mustang Factory for One Week After Sales Plunge 32%

  • Chevy Camaro outsold Ford pony car for first time in 23 months
  • Michigan factory makes all the Mustangs sold globally
Photographer: Matthew Lloyd/Bloomberg
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Ford Motor Co. is shutting its Mustang factory in Michigan for a week after the iconic sports car suffered a 32 percent sales decline in the U.S. last month and was outsold by the Chevrolet Camaro for the first time in almost two years.

The second-largest U.S. automaker idled the factory in Flat Rock, south of Detroit, to match production capacity with demand, Kelli Felker, a company spokeswoman, said in an e-mailed statement. The plant, which employs 3,702 workers and makes Mustangs and Lincoln Continentals, will resume production Oct. 17, Felker said. Under the automaker’s labor agreement, workers will be paid during the shutdown.