Microchip availability boosts Stellantis revenues, shipments in the first quarter

Stellantis NV on Wednesday said revenue increased 14% to $52 billion (47.2 billion euro) in the first quarter of 2023 from last year as global shipments increased 7% and inventories recovered from the ongoing global microchip shortage.

Shipments totaled 1.476 million vehicles in the first quarter. In its largest region, North America, revenue rose 10% year-over-year to $25.105 billion (22.772 billion euro), and shipments increased 6% to 509,000 vehicles, despite Stellantis posting a 9% decrease in U.S. sales year-over-year.

Improvement in fulfilled semiconductor orders increased shipments, though the end of production of the previous generation of the Jeep Grand Cherokee and a now-resolved stop sale on Ram’s heavy-duty trucks because of a fire risk hurt sales.

Richard Palmer is the chief financial officer of Stellantis NV. The automaker reported a 14% increase year-over-year in revenue in the first quarter.

“We’re seeing slowly but surely improvements in U.S. and North America share as we improve inventory levels and also the mix of inventory,” Richard Palmer, chief financial officer, said during a virtual briefing early Wednesday. “The April market was pretty good, so demand is strong.”

Global new vehicle inventory was at a total 1.302 million vehicles at the end of March, reflecting a return to normal inventory levels, according to the automaker. That mostly came from the 384,000 vehicles in the company’s inventory as the automaker battles challenges with outbound transportation.

Palmer characterized a 1.3-million vehicle inventory as “reasonably placed.” Dealership inventories were up mostly in North America, but he said that is warranted as the automaker heads into the spring selling season.

“Short term, pricing should be relatively stable, too,” he said, “but clearly that depends on order intake, and we’ll see how that performance (goes) coming into the spring season here and going into the second half.”

Unlike its Detroit rivals, Stellantis, which is domiciled in the Netherlands, only reports earnings for the first and second halves of the year. Results for the first half of 2023 are scheduled to be reported on July 26.

The first-quarter results come after the automaker announced it would offer buyouts to 31,000 hourly workers in the United States and Canada and to 2,500 U.S. salaried workers. The company, however, already has issued temporary layoffs to hundreds of autoworkers at its assembly plants in the meantime.