Stellantis N.V.
CorpDigest
Stellantis N.V.
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$170.2B
▼ 17.2% vs FY2023 ($205.7B)
Net Income: $6.0B
Stellantis N.V. reported $170.2B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a decline of 17.2% compared to the 2023 figure of $205.7B.
Stellantis FY2024 revenue of $170.2 billion fell 17.3% from FY2023's $205.7 billion — one of the largest single-year revenue declines for a company of this scale outside of a financial crisis or pandemic. Net income of $5.99 billion compared to FY2023's $20.3 billion net profit represents a 70% earnings collapse driven by volume declines, the North American segment loss of $1.9 billion in H2 2024, and $837 million in Takata airbag recall costs. The revenue trajectory from FY2022's $194.9 billion through FY2023's $205.7 billion peak and the FY2024 collapse tells the story of a company that benefited from post-COVID supply constraints more than its operational strength warranted, then faced the true competitive position of its product lineup when supply normalized. Cost of revenues consumed 86.9% of net revenues in FY2024, up from 79.9% in FY2023, as lower volumes spread fixed manufacturing costs across fewer units — the operating use that works powerfully in both directions in automotive manufacturing. The South American market position — number one share at 22-25% in Brazil — and EU30 commercial vehicle leadership at 30% market share provide stable profit anchors that partially offset the North American implosion. These segments are not exciting growth stories, but they generate the cash that funds the product investment recovery Filosa needs to execute in North America. Market capitalization of approximately $20.9 billion on FY2024 revenue of $170.2 billion represents roughly 0.12x revenue — a valuation multiple associated with automotive companies in financial distress rather than recovery. The market is pricing significant continued uncertainty about North American brand recovery, the China strategy, the EV transition gap, and whether the post-Tavares management team can execute a product investment recovery without the cost discipline that made the merger's first two years so profitable.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.