Stellantis, the many global knots to unravel
4' min read
4' min read
There are many intricate knots that the future CEO of Stellantis will have to untangle, some of which are on the table of the Chief Operating Officer, Jean-Philippe Imparato, who will be at Mimit on Wednesday. One of them is the overlap between brands and the possible sale of brands that are turning into dead wood, weighing on the accounts. Brands that former number one Carlo Tavares has repeatedly said he does not want to sell.
First of all Maserati, where it seems to have gone back to 2016 when there was even talk of a closure of the historic Modena plant. In 2020, everything seemed to have been resolved, thanks to the 2.5 billion euro invested by Fca for the restyling of the Modena plant (costing 800,000 euro), the Grugliasco plant at full capacity, the Innovation Lab with over 1,100 people at work and a pharaonic product plan starting with the MC20 christened the new Era of the Trident. According to Maserati's top management, within five years (announcement in December 2020, therefore post first wave of coveted coveted products), 20 new products would be launched, 13 of which would be unreleased models. In actual fact, the Grugliasco plant has been closed, the Innovation Lab dismantled, the Modena plant recently recorded a -75% drop in production, new models have been limited to five instead of 13 (MC20, MC20 Cielo, Grecale, Granturismo and GranCabrio) and the Folgore full electric project is a real flop. From almost 23,500 cars sold in Europe in 2018 to 7,900 in 2023.
Abarth's decline is evident, with the electric 500 Abarth now a meme on four wheels due to ridiculous numbers such as the 14 registrations achieved in the first three months of '24 out of a total of 117 as of 1 November.
And Abarth's numerically insignificant but symbolic future will depend on the use of platforms dedicated to 'small cars'. To date, the Smart Car platform (an inexpensive derivation of the French CMP and born thanks also to the Indian engineers of Tata Consulting who put their hands on the object originally developed with Dongfeng) has become the starting point for the Stellantis compact cars, while awaiting the resolution of the Stla Small knot, ready to make its debut in 2026 on the Peugeot 208 produced in Spain and then become the basis for many other future models now built on CMP2, such as the 'Polish' Alfa Romeo Junior, Jeep Avenger and Fiat 600. On Stla Small will be based the future generation of Fiat 500 (all new, not the current electric one from Mirafiori that is being modified) in order to make it a mild hybrid and give the factory breath again.
The Small is the last of Stellantis' four unified 'born electric' and multi-energy platforms. The others are Medium (which made its debut in Sochaux on the Peugeot 3008 and will also be used in Melfi on the DS No. 8, Lancia Gamma and the future Jeep Compass) Large (launched in the USA but ready to arrive in Cassino to give life to the second generation of the Alfa Romeo Stelvio and Giulia) and Frame for US pick-ups and SUVs. In fact, things are no better on the other side of the ocean, with plummeting profitability and a general discontent in the North American market that contributed significantly to Carlos Tavares' exit from the scene.


