Stellantis reports massive .3 billion loss, but improving 2nd half results as turnaround slowly begins


Big Three automaker Stellantis (STLA) reported a massive full-year loss after taking a $26 billion EV-related charge, but saw improving second half (H2) results suggesting the company’s turnaround under CEO Antonio Filosa may be working.

Stellantis — which counts brands like Ram, Jeep, Fiat, and Alfa Romeo in its product portfolio — reported H2 net revenue of 79.25 billion euros ($93.47 billion), in range of 78 billion to 80 billion euros ($91.87 to $94.23 billion) forecast, and 10% higher than the 71.86 billion euros ($84.64 billion) reported a year ago.

Stellantis posted a second-half adjusted operating income (AOI) loss of 1.38 billion euros ($1.63 billion), also in range of the 1.2 billion to 1.5 billion euros ($1.41 billion to 1.77 billion) forecast, a reversal of the 185 million euro ($218 million) gain reported in the second half of 2024, which itself was a massive drop compared to the 10.2 billion euro ($12 billion) profit reported in 2023.

Global shipments also improved in H2, with the company seeing an 11% jump to 277K units, with every region reporting higher volumes.

For the full year, Stellantis reported a net loss of 22.3 billion euros ($26.3 billion), due to 25.4 billion euros ($29.96 billion) of “unusual charges,” the company said.

Stellantis stock was little changed in pre-market trade in New York.

“Our 2025 full year results reflect the cost of over-estimating the pace of the energy transition and of the need to reset our business around our customers’ freedom to choose from the full range of electric, hybrid and internal combustion technologies,” CEO Antonio Filosa said in a statement.

Read more: Live coverage of corporate earnings

The results came after the company disclosed a 22.2 billion euro ($26 billion) EV-related charge earlier this month. Cash payments of 6.5 billion euros ($7.7 billion) will be paid out over the next four years, and charges totaling 14.7 billion euros ($17.34 billion) will be taken against the company’s 2025 second-half results, Stellantis said. The charges won’t impact the company’s adjusted operating income, however.

The charges were a direct consequence of the company abandoning its earlier aggressive EV targets, CEO Antonio Filosa said, adding that they “largely reflect the cost of over-estimating the pace of the energy transition that distanced us from many car buyers’ real-world needs, means and desires.”

The write-down also included cancellations of the planned Ram 1500 BEV and battery gigafactories in Italy and Germany, as well as impairments to several EV platforms. The largest portion of the charges was related to realigning production plans with customer preferences, plus the impact of new US emissions regulations that reflect significantly reduced expectations for battery electric vehicle products.

Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa poses by a Jeep Cherokee during media day of the Detroit Auto Show on Jan. 14. (Reuters/Rebecca Cook) · REUTERS / Reuters

Stellantis stock tumbled 25% on the day of that announcement, Feb. 6, and shares have struggled to recover, trading near multiyear lows heading into Thursday’s report.

Earlier in the month, Stellantis reported Q4 2025 consolidated shipments of 1.5 million units, a 9% year-over-year increase, primarily driven by North America, where shipments rose 43% compared to the same period in 2024.

Combined sales of the Ram 1500 with the Hemi V-8 and the refreshed Jeep Cherokee hybrid accounted for more than 30% of the year-over-year growth, affirming Filosa’s pivot toward what the company is calling a “freedom of choice” powertrain strategy.

Customer order intake in Enlarged Europe accelerated in H2 2025, rising 13% year over year, with Q4 2025 orders up 23%. In Europe, Stellantis retained its No. 2 market share position and led the all-hybrids segment. However, Enlarged Europe overall saw shipments decline by about 4% in Q4, with Peugeot in particular posting weaker volumes ahead of model changeovers.

Filosa has been in the job for less than a year, having been selected as CEO in June 2025 after serving as the company’s Americas COO. Stellantis and Filosa committed $13 billion in US investment over four years, adding more than 5,000 jobs and launching several new vehicles — initiatives it is counting on to rebuild its commercial footing. Filosa highlighted accelerating Ram 1500 HEMI production in particular, estimating approximately 100,000 additional units produced and sold in 2026, which he called “big profit” for the company.

Looking ahead, Stellantis expects net revenues to rise in the mid-single digits in 2026, with low-single-digit AOI margin. The company aims to return to positive industrial free cash flow by 2027.

Industrial available liquidity ended 2025 at approximately 46 billion euros, representing a 30% ratio compared to net revenues, providing some balance sheet runway. The board has authorized the issuance of up to 5 billion euros ($5.9 billion) in non-convertible hybrid bonds.

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Pras Subramanian is Lead Auto Reporter for Yahoo Finance. You can follow him on X and on Instagram.

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