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Stellantis to strike more partnerships in Italy for Maserati, e-cars, CEO says

Stellantis to strike more partnerships in Italy for Maserati, e-cars, CEO says

ReutersWed, June 17, 2026 at 3:29 PM UTC

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Antonio Filosa, CEO of Stellantis, poses next to a Peugeot 308 car being assembled on the automotive assembly line for Peugeot 308 and Peugeot 408 cars during a visit at the Stellantis factory in Mulhouse, eastern France, June 2, 2026. REUTERS/Alice Sacco

MILAN, June 17 (Reuters) - Stellantis is in talks with potential partners for two more manufacturing deals in Italy, including for its struggling luxury brand Maserati, the automaker's CEO said on Wednesday ‌during a parliamentary hearing in Rome.

Chief Executive Antonio Filosa, who took the top job at ‌the French-Italian group a year ago, said he was in a negotiation on behalf of Maserati "with two important partners, which can ​bring us technology, development and excellent ideas".

"We're choosing which one to continue with in the future," he said, responding to lawmakers' questions.

Filosa last month unveiled Stellantis' €60 billion business plan to 2030, with 60 new models globally and new partnerships including production tie-ups with Chinese groups Leapmotor and Dongfeng.

Maserati is due to present its own strategy ‌in December.

A new deal for Maserati will ⁠have a positive impact on production rates at the Cassino and Modena plants in Italy, where the brand's models are manufactured, Filosa said.

He also denied recurring speculation ⁠of a sale of Maserati - which recently included that of an interest from China's BYD - and of the Cassino facility, one of the group's least utilised sites in Europe.

"Maserati is not for sale, for sure, Cassino is not ​for ​sale, for sure," he said. "What can happen in Cassino, ​as will happen in other plants, is to ‌have partnerships for cooperation and development".

E-CAR PARTNERSHIP

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As part of its long-term strategy, Stellantis also announced plans to build e-cars - small, affordable, fully electric vehicles costing around €15,000 - in Italy's Pomigliano plant, near Naples.

"Clearly e-cars are something we will do with a partner and we're finalising the deal," Filosa said, adding all new partnerships Stellantis is pursuing will see it having a 51% stake, as is the case for those deals it ‌already announced with Leapmotor and Dongfeng.

The CEO said Stellantis aimed ​at producing at least two e-car models in Pomigliano, but ​he hoped for three.

Manufacturing agreements will help ​Stellantis achieve its "challenging" target of improving its capacity utilisation in Europe to over ‌80% by 2030.

"We will achieve it in particular ​through an increase in volumes ​thanks to our new model launches and improved quality, the reconversion of some plants and industrial partnerships, which will allow us to share production capacity and know-how," Filosa told lawmakers.

Stellantis, whose other ​brands include Fiat, Peugeot and ‌Jeep, last month said its capacity utilisation in Europe currently ran at 60%.

Europe, Stellantis' largest ​market along with North America, will get around 40% of the plan's overall investments.

(Reporting by ​Giulio Piovaccari, editing by Alvise Armellini and Keith Weir)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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