Key Highlights
- The automaker posted Q1 2026 net profit of €377 million, reversing the €387 million loss from the prior year period
- Reported adjusted operating income reached €960 million, surpassing expectations, though approximately €400 million stemmed from tariff-related adjustments
- When excluding the IEEPA tariff benefit, North America’s operating margin drops to 1.2% — trailing the 1.8% analyst forecast
- Top-line revenue climbed 6% to €38.13 billion, falling below market projections
- Management reaffirmed 2026 annual targets while reducing net tariff expense forecast to €1.30 billion from €1.60 billion
Shares of Stellantis tumbled over 6% Thursday following the release of first quarter 2026 financial results. The headline figures appeared encouraging at first glance. A closer examination revealed reasons for investor concern.
The company recorded top-line revenue of €38.13 billion, representing 6% year-over-year growth. While the percentage increase exceeded analyst projections of 4.7%, the absolute figure came in below expectations. Net earnings reached €377 million, marking a dramatic reversal from the €387 million deficit reported during the same quarter last year.
Adjusted operating profit totaled €960 million, translating to a 2.5% margin that outperformed the €696 million analyst consensus. The market reaction seemed counterintuitive given these numbers.
Jefferies analysts identified approximately €400 million in IEEPA tariff-related cost adjustments embedded within the North American segment results. Removing this benefit reveals adjusted operating income closer to €560 million — yielding a 1.2% margin that falls significantly below the anticipated 1.8%.
“NA missed headline, and to a greater extent excl IEEPA, with mix and cost possibly looking weaker than expected,” Jefferies wrote.
North American Operations Underperform Expectations
The North American market represents Stellantis‘s most critical region for turnaround efforts. The territory delivered €16.11 billion in revenue — exceeding all other geographic segments.
The division generated adjusted operating income of €263 million with a 1.6% margin, contrasting sharply with the €542 million deficit from Q1 2025. Unit shipments increased 17% to 379,000 vehicles, propelled by strong demand for the Ram 1500, updated Jeep Grand Wagoneer, and completely redesigned Jeep Cherokee.
While these figures demonstrate improvement, the tariff-adjusted shortfall raises questions about the fundamental strength of the recovery beyond accounting benefits.
European operations presented additional challenges. The region produced merely €8 million in adjusted operating income from €14.38 billion in revenue — yielding a 0.1% margin, down substantially from 2.1% in the prior year period. Pricing pressure and unfavorable vehicle mix weighted on performance.
Jefferies characterized the European results as “a small beat with moving parts roughly as expected,” highlighting ongoing pricing headwinds as the primary concern.
Strong Performance in Select Markets
South America emerged as a performance leader, delivering €393 million in adjusted operating income with a robust 10.8% margin. The Middle East and Africa contributed €282 million at an 11.8% margin. Asia Pacific continued facing difficulties, recording a €30 million operating loss.
Industrial free cash flow came in at negative €1.92 billion — representing a 37% improvement compared to the prior year, though falling short of Jefferies’ negative €1.2 billion projection. Working capital outflows exceeded analyst models.
The quarter incorporated approximately €700 million in cash expenditures related to charges from the second half of 2025. Capital spending decreased €800 million year-over-year to €1.62 billion.
Industrial liquidity availability measured €44.14 billion as of March 31, 2026, representing 28% of trailing twelve-month revenues — comfortably within the company’s stated 25–30% target corridor.
Stellantis reaffirmed full-year 2026 projections: mid-single-digit revenue expansion, low-single-digit adjusted operating margin, and enhanced industrial free cash flow generation. The automaker also lowered its net tariff cost estimate to €1.30 billion from the previous €1.60 billion assumption.
Jefferies continues recommending the stock as a “buy” with an $11.70 price objective.
Chief Executive Antonio Filosa indicated the ten new vehicle introductions scheduled for 2026 should amplify the positive momentum generated by 2025 product launches.

