Italian parts makers fret over size after Stellantis merger

Italian component suppliers see their small average size struggling to adapt to industry changes following the merger of local carmaker Fiat Chrysler with PSA which created Stellantis, a trade lobby group survey has showed.

Reuters noted most of the Italian parts suppliers surveyed by Italian automotive industry lobby ANFIA did not give a final judgment about consequences of the creation of Stellantis, now the world’s fourth largest carmaker.

But it showed a majority of those who responded think their size could put them under pressure from the bigger carmaker to adapt to its demands.

“There is a problem with size and this is an issue, especially in terms of investments, when businesses need to refocus their productions,” Marco Stella, head of the components sector at ANFIA, was quoted as saying, noting Italy did not have large car part suppliers like Germany.

“Small size affects their ability to respond to challenges posed by industry changes.”

However, many of the respondents in the survey still saw the merger as an opportunity, in particular for wider access to markets the group can guarantee, the report said, according to Reuters.

Francesco Zirpoli of Venice Ca’ Foscari University, who contributed to the report, said the fortunes of Italy’s car part suppliers would be tightly linked to how Stellantis manages the overlap between its former Fiat Chrysler and PSA European supply chains.

“Italian car parts makers are struggling to update their offer through R&D investments,” he told the news agency.

The report showed the Italian car parts industry comprised around 2,200 companies, with total revenue of almost EUR45bn (US$52bn) last year. Around 42% of that came from sales to Stellantis.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Source

Comments (0)
Add Comment