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Stellantis CEO: Partnerships will be Part of Future Strategy

MILAN, May 12 (Reuters) - Stellantis Chief Executive Antonio Filosa said on Tuesday partnerships would be a key part of the automaker's future strategy, as it prepares ​to present a new multi-year business plan next week.

Filosa said Stellantis ‌had learnt the power of partnerships and that "they will be embedded in our strategy going forward".

"By working with a set of partners to build a roadmap of technological improvement, supply chain ​improvement and maybe capacity utilization, those are very good topics to work ​together and create benefits for both sides," he said at the ⁠Financial Times' Future of the Car Summit.

Stellantis last week announced plans to start ​joint car production in Europe with Chinese partner Leapmotor, deepening their tie-up beyond distribution into ​manufacturing.

Chinese carmakers are increasingly eager to use existing plants or partner with local manufacturers to quickly support sales growth in Europe while also avoiding European Union tariffs on Chinese-made EVs.

Filosa said ​last month said the Leapmotor partnership could be a model for future cooperation ​with other Chinese automakers. But on Tuesday he said deals could come beyond Chinese manufacturers as ‌Stellantis' ⁠large output, vast global presence and wide brand portfolio make it attractive for long-term partnerships.

"There are many things that can be done in that space," Filosa said.

EFFICIENT CAPITAL ALLOCATION ON BRANDS

Stellantis will present its new business plan at a capital markets ​day in Auburn Hills, ​Michigan, on May ⁠21, where brand strategy is also expected to be a key point.

Reuters last month reported that Stellantis would focus the ​majority of its investment on its core Jeep, Ram, Peugeot ​and Fiat brands, ⁠while also planning to keep all the others as they retain local relevance.

Filosa said on Tuesday brands were Stellantis' "strongest asset" and that being too drastic in quitting one ⁠or more ​of them meant losing customer base to a ​competitor.

"The real point is to combine efficient capital allocation with brand-specific strategies," he said.

Reporting by Giulio Piovaccari ​in Milan and Gilles Guillaume in Paris. Editing by Alvise Armellini and Mark Potter

Source: Reuters


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