Stellantis NV

NYSE: STLA
$15.00
-$0.42 (-2.7%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

STLA Articles

So far in 2017, Fiat Chrysler (NYSE: FCAU) shares have risen 14% this year against the S&P 500’s advance of 1.2%. Shares of Ford (NYSE: F) have faltered, down 4.6%. Shares of GM (NYSE: GM) are...
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Alcoa, Altria, Ford, GoPro, NVIDIA, International Paper and Transocean.
Chrysler and Jeep receive the most complaints about safety issues of any vehicles sold in the United States.
The Fiat brand is so unpopular that its total national sales dropped to an average of 70 per day in January.
Ford F-Series pickups were January's best sellers by a wide margin. Looking ahead, two primary drivers for new car sales are tugging in opposite directions.
Year over year, sales dropped 11% at Fiat Chrysler in January, in part due to slow Jeep sales, but that was less than expected.
The current major marketing campaign for Chevrolet talks about the record number of quality awards it has received recently. The awards did not help its sales last year.
The auto industry cannot sell 17 million cars and light trucks in America year after year. At some point buyer demand will become sated.
Whether you are trading your car in for a new model or trying to sell it on your own, its resale value really matters.
President Donald Trump and the CEOs of America's Detroit Three automakers are meeting for breakfast Tuesday morning, and there's not much mystery about what they're going to be talking about.
President Trump announced Friday the U.S. withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement and the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
GM about to join Ford and Fiat Chrysler in announcing new U.S. investment, creating more U.S. jobs.
New car sales in the European Union rose almost 7% in 2016 to 14.64 million units.
Fiat Chrysler is scrambling to defend itself against accusations that it violated the Clean Air Act. The incident involved version of two of its best-selling vehicles.
It turns out that Volkswagen may not have been the only one fudging on emissions. Reports that Fiat Chrysler Automobiles is now being targeted by the EPA have put a serious hurt on its shares.