Electric car crisis sparks calls to dismantle ‘Frankenstein’ Vauxhall owner

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Illustration: Stellantis Frankenstein

Just nine months ago, Carlos Tavares looked like one of the most unassailable chief executives in the automotive business.

The former Stellantis boss – whose abrupt departure emerged late on Sunday – had overseen yet another year of record profits at the world’s fourth-biggest carmaker.

This was partly the result of relentless cost-cutting, after the Portuguese executive in 2021 masterminded the stitching together of Fiat Chrysler and PSA Group to create a carmaking Frankenstein’s monster.

But behind the enormous scale of Stellantis, problems have been brewing that have since brought Tavares’s tenure to a screeching halt. They threaten to create a nightmare for his successor as well.

Among them is the question of whether Stellantis, a global behemoth spanning 14 brands including Vauxhall, Fiat, Peugeot and Jeep, can continue as a vast chimera, analysts said on Monday.

At the same time, the chief executive’s demise is the latest sign of turmoil gripping Europe’s car industry as Chinese rivals muscle in to their markets around the world.

Carlos Tavares
The qualities that won Carlos Tavares praise at the height of his powers have now been blamed for his undoing as Stellantis boss – Benoit Tessier/Reuters

“The situation is getting so difficult, not just for Stellantis but for all the legacy Western carmakers,” says Felipe Munoz, an auto industry analyst at Jato Dynamics.

“Tavares’s approach of cutting costs worked up to a point, when there wasn’t so much pressure from China.

“But what we are seeing is that this strategy has limits.”

An engineer by training and a race car obsessive, Tavares earned a reputation among investors for gripping costs and delivering double-digit profit margins no matter what.

He rose through the ranks at Renault – where he began as a test car driver – and Nissan, before taking over as chief executive of PSA Group in 2014, the French giant best known for Peugeot and Citroën.

There, he oversaw a spectacular turnaround and the acquisition of the Opel and Vauxhall brands from General Motors in 2017.

But his masterstroke followed six years later, when he agreed a mega-merger with Fiat Chrysler, the Italian car giant controlled by the powerful Agnelli family.

Three years of record profits followed, as he once again bore down on costs and delivered bigger savings than many investors had dreamed. It looked like classic Tavares.

“Carlos is probably the smartest guy I’ve ever worked with,” says Andy Palmer, a former Nissan executive who worked with Tavares at the Japanese company.

“His knowledge of the car is extraordinary, he’s a real product guy. But he also has a very sound understanding of finance and business, so he’s a rare talent.

“I wouldn’t say he’s ruthless, but he can sometimes come across as a bit of a cold fish – and that has allowed him to get things done.”

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