Shareholders of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and PSA, the French maker of Peugeot, Citroën and Opel cars, voted on Monday to merge in an effort to acquire the scale necessary to survive in an industry gripped by technological change and pummeled by the pandemic.
The new company, to be called Stellantis, will employ 400,000 people and include the Jeep, Ram Trucks, Alfa Romeo and Maserati brands. It would be the world’s fourth-largest carmaker, after Toyota, Volkswagen and the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance, based on vehicle sales during the first nine months of 2020.
Executives of Fiat Chrysler and PSA agreed at the end of 2019 to merge and have been working out the details and securing regulatory approval since then.
Together, the two companies believe they stand a better chance of surviving a transition to electric vehicles, which is happening faster than most analysts predicted.
“We are living through a profound era of change in our industry,” John Elkann, the chairman of Fiat Chrysler, told shareholders by video, drawing comparisons to Fiat’s founding at the dawn of the automobile age. “We believe the coming decade will redefine mobility as we know it.”
The new company, which will be based in the Netherlands with large operations in France, Italy and the United States, will face major challenges. Neither Fiat Chrysler nor PSA has a strong presence in China, the world’s largest car market, and they have been slow to introduce electric vehicles.
The two companies have some assets, such as the popular Jeep and Ram brands, said Peter Wells, a professor at Cardiff Business School in Wales. Fiat and PSA delivery vans are selling briskly in Europe as people buy more goods online.
But Fiat Chrysler and PSA also have grave problems, Mr. Wells said, such as underused assembly lines, which will make it difficult for them to fulfill promises to unions and the French government, a major shareholder, not to close factories.
PSA and Fiat Chrysler “have a bunch of structural problems that aren’t going to go away easily,” Mr. Wells said.
Bruno Le Maire, the French economics and finance minister, and Stefano Patuanelli, his Italian counterpart, said in a joint statement that they “warmly welcome” the merger, which will create a “new European champion.”
“Both governments will also pay attention to Stellantis’ contribution to industrial employment in Italy and France,” they added.
Perceived interference by the French government led Fiat to pull out of merger talks with Renault in 2019.
Fiat and PSA have been hard hit by the pandemic. PSA’s vehicle sales were down 30 percent in the 11 months through November, while Fiat Chrysler sold 30 percent fewer cars and trucks in the nine months through September, the most recent reporting period.
The damage wrought by the pandemic prompted the companies to adjust the terms of the merger in September. A special dividend to Fiat Chrysler shareholders, to be paid when the deal closes later in January, was cut to 2.9 billion euros, or $3.6 billion, from €5.5 billion. In return, Fiat Chrysler shareholders will get a bigger slice of possible future payouts.
Mr. Elkann said the pandemic had made the rationale for the merger “even more compelling.”
Carlos Tavares, the chief executive of PSA, will hold the same title at the new entity. Mr. Elkann, a scion of Italy’s Agnelli family and descendant of the man who founded Fiat in 1899, is in line to be chairman. Mike Manley, the chief executive of Fiat Chrysler, will manage the combined company’s American operations.
“We are ready for this merger,” Mr. Tavares said during the meeting of PSA shareholders, which was conducted online. He said the merger would allow the companies to share the cost of developing electric vehicles and give PSA access to the American market while reducing its dependence on Europe.
Mr. Wells of Cardiff Business School said that, for all its faults, the merger probably offered Fiat Chrysler and PSA their best chance of surviving in a brutally competitive environment.
“If it didn’t go through, the consequences would be much worse,” Mr. Wells said. “The handwriting would have been on the wall for these two companies.”