​Ford is taking the drastic step of removing nearly all cars from its model lineup, betting that a surge in SUV and truck demand in the U.S. will strengthen profits.

Continue Reading Below

Its rivals, though, appear committed to maintaining at least a partial foothold in a segment that continues to account for millions of vehicles sold each year.

Ford said Wednesday that it will no longer sell sedans in North America. By 2020, 90% of its lineup will consist of trucks and SUVs. The company’s revamped car lineup will consist of just two models: the Mustang and a new crossover, the Focus Active.

In addition to declining sales across the industry, Ford noted that small cars are a drag on earnings. Ford loses money on its small cars and most Lincoln models, according to Chief Financial Officer Bob Shanks. Ford didn’t share any new details about its strategy for Lincoln, but the Continental and MKZ—luxury models that share platforms with the outgoing Fords—also may be in danger of elimination.

Ford won’t be the first automaker to pull slow-selling and unprofitable sedans from its showrooms, a response to buyers’ preference for larger vehicles. Fiat Chrysler ceased building the Dodge Dart and Chrysler 200 in 2017, shifting production capacity to Jeep SUVs and Ram trucks.

Other automakers, including General Motors, have eliminated shifts at factories that build small cars.

The shocking part of Ford’s announcement is “how quickly and how many vehicles” it chose to scrap in one move, said Jessica Caldwell, executive director of industry analysis for Edmunds. The Fiesta, Focus, Fusion, Taurus and C-MAX will all be removed from the Blue Oval’s lineup. Ford sold about 466,000 of those vehicles in the U.S. last year.

“It’s definitely a tough decision,” Caldwell said. “Here in the U.S., it certainly makes sense. Ford is known for SUVs and trucks. It hasn’t had much success in the passenger car segment.”

More from FOX Business