Ford Motor vehicles are displayed for sale at the Leif Johnson Ford dealership on June 30, 2026 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell | Getty ImagesDETROIT — Ford Motor on Thursday reported a 10.3% decline in its second-quarter U.S. new vehicle sales as the company battled a supplier issue for its F-Series pickup trucks and a significant decline in all-electric vehicles. The Detroit automaker said its pure EV sales fell by 40.7% during the quarter compared with a year earlier. Sales of its F-Series trucks, including the F-150, fell 11% as Ford began ramping up production after its top aluminum supplier restarted production following two fires late last year."Although customer demand remains high, first-half F-Series sales reflect a retiming of commercial production following last year's aluminum supply shortages. Ford expects supply to recover more fully in the second half of the year," Ford said in a release.Ford sold 549,200 vehicles during the second quarter compared to 612,095 units a year earlier. While that's among the largest expected industry declines, the results slightly beat Cox Automotive's expectations for Ford sales to fall 11.5%.This is breaking news. Please check back for additional details. Read more CNBC auto newsFord CEO wants level playing field with Toyota, GM imports as USMCA trade talks reopenTesla reports 480,126 vehicle deliveries for second quarter, topping expectationAutomakers report mixed U.S. sales results as hybrid vehicles drive marketU.S. auto industry faces increased uncertainty without extension of USMCA trade deal