Will all of the brands housed under the Stellantis umbrella be around by the turn of decade?

When the PSA Group and Fiat Chrysler merged to form Stellantis at the beginning of 2021, then CEO Carlos Tavares gave its troubled brands 10 years to turn themselves around.

Mr Tavares quit at the end of 2024 after falling out with the board, and by the middle of 2025 Antonio Filosa was appointed to replace him.

A source told Reuters, Mr Filosa is currently considering the long-term viability of its company’s 14 brands (Alfa Romeo, Fiat/Abarth, Lancia, Maserati, Peugeot, Citroen, DS, Opel/Vauxhall, Jeep, Dodge, Ram, and Chrysler). It should be noted Vauxhall is British-exclusive rebadge of Opel, and Abarth only sells heated up Fiat models.

DS No8 Presidential
DS No8 Presidential

Mr Filosa’s first priority seems to be North America, where he has helped return the Hemi V8 to the Ram 1500 pickup truck range, ended development of Ram 1500 EV in favour of a range-extender model, reconstituted the SRT performance arm, and hinted at new vehicles for Chrysler.

He has also ended the North American arm’s premium pricing strategy, and has embraced fleet sales to keep factories ticking over. Both moves run counter to his predecessor’s focus on profit margins over volume.

It’s not clear when a decision will be reached, but if Mr Filosa’s short term strategy proves to be successful, it could buy the automaker more time to come a decision.

Given the company’s dealerships sell all four of the company’s North American-born brands (Ram, Jeep, Dodge and Chrysler), and largely avoid any overlap, they seem to be safe from the chop.

Maserati Grecale
Maserati Grecale