Dodge maker Stellantis posts 27% drop in revenues, flags progress in slashing U.S. inventories
Auto giant Stellantis on Thursday reported a 27% decline in third-quarter net revenues, but said it was making headway in addressing operational issues such as U.S. inventories.
The Netherlands-based company, which owns household names including Jeep, Dodge, Fiat, Chrysler and Peugeot, said that net revenues for the July-September period came in at 33 billion euros ($35.8 billion). Analysts had expected third-quarter net revenues to come in at 36.6 billion euros, according to an LSEG-compiled consensus.
The firm attributed the drop primarily to "lower shipments and unfavorable mix as well as pricing and foreign exchange impacts."
It said it was on tack to deliver approximately 20 new models this year, adding that it was making good progress on slashing bloated inventories, especially in the U.S.
Its total stocks fell by 129,000 units between January and September to 1.3 million. The automaker noted that the U.S. dealer inventory was cut by 80,000 units between June 30 and Wednesday. Stellantis said it is set to reach its target of slimming down the U.S. stocks by 100,000 units by the end of November.
Doug Ostermann, chief financial officer at Stellantis, conceded that the quarterly performance was "below our potential," but said that U.S. inventories had been "reduced meaningfully" and were set to hit the company's targets.
"In Europe, stringent quality requirements delayed the start of certain high-volume products, but with progress resolving challenges we will soon benefit from the significantly expanded reach our generational new product wave brings to 2025 and beyond," he said in a statement Thursday.
The trans-Atlantic automaker issued a profit warning in late September, trimming its annual guidance on the back of