Stellantis Showing Grand Cherokee 4xe, Chrysler Concept at CES 2022

Attendees at CES 2022 in Las Vegas will get their first in-person look at the 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe as well as a concept car called the Chrysler Airflow as Stellantis looks make an impact on the highly influential show.

The Stellantis booth diagram at CES 2022 seems to lack vehicles from some of their brands, including Dodge and Ram.

Stellantis will showcase its salvo in electrification with more than just the Grand Cherokee 4xe, displaying vehicles spanning all of the company’s 14 brands, and featuring not just electrification, but autonomy and connectivity — technology that has been largely absent from its portfolios.

“The future of mobility is fueled by technology,” said Carlos Tavares, Stellantis CEO, in a statement. “Electrification, with our 30 electrified models available including fuel cell vans, connectivity and autonomy are all important facets of that future.”

Four platforms underpin Stellantis’s future

In July, Stellantis announced over €30 billion of investments in electrification and software through 2025 to execute its ambitious transformation.

The company’s show of force at CES is proof of the company’s massive product makeover. Going forward, battery-electric vehicles will use one of four platforms: STLA Small, STLA Medium, STLA large, and STLA Frame. The platforms are designed to accept a variety of drivelines.

Of 14 brands, Jeep’s the star

Despite its wide array of brands, the company appears to be focusing most on Jeep. 

2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee Summit 4xe charging
Stellantis is showing the 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe, shown here in Summit trim charging, at CES 2022 in Las Vegas.

Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe: Given that Jeep has already announced “Zero Emission Freedom,” its plan to offer a fully electric Jeep vehicle in every SUV segment by 2025, the arrival of the first Grand Cherokee plug-in hybrid electric model is no surprise. It’s expected to deliver 25 miles of all-electric range, while returning 57 MPGe. That’s impressive for an SUV with 375 horsepower and 470 pound-feet of torque.

When it comes to technology performance, the 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee is equipped with a 10.1-inch display, Uconnect 5, an operating speed that’s five times faster than its predecessor, and equipped to handle over-the-air updates. Front passengers get a 10.25-inch touchscreen, while those in back can have 10.1-inch displays. And Amazon Fire TV streaming is built-in. Jeep will offer the Grand Cherokee 4xe in four trim levels: Limited, Trailhawk, Overland and Summit. The 4xe will not be offered on base Laredo models. 

Stellantis will emphasize its new Wagoneer luxury sub-brand at CES, with a display that fills a quarter if the booth.

Jeep Wrangler 4xe: Adding an exclamation point to the Grand Cherokee 4xe is the Wrangler 4xe, which provides 21 miles of pure electric driving, not bad for a vehicle that will take you to the edge of civilization. Power comes from a 2.0-liter inline-4 and two electric motors that generate 375 hp and 470 lb-ft of torque, enough to tow 3,500 pounds.

There’s also a conventional hybrid mode that blends power from both the gas engine and electric motors. A third, “e-Save” mode puts a priority on recapturing energy normally lost during braking and coasting to build up the battery pack’s charge.

Jeep Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer: Jeep’s new luxury sub-brand is not expected to be shown in 4xe trim. But the Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer is loaded with cutting-edge technology, with up to seven screens, including a 12.3-inch digital gauge cluster, a 12.1-inch infotainment touchscreen, a third screen for the front seat passenger, two video screens for the second row and another for the third row.

Integrated Amazon Fire TV, and a 1,375 watt, 23-speaker McIntosh sound system rounds out its tech package. Opting for the less-flashy Wagoneer nets an SUV powered by a 5.7-liter Hemi V-8 with a 48-volt hybrid system, delivering 392 hp and 404 lb-ft of torque, and returns an EPA fuel economy rating of up to 16 mpg city and 22 mpg highway.

Is a reimagined Chrysler on the way?

Chrysler Airflow concept CES 2022
Stellantis is looking to make a splash at CES with the Chrysler Airflow Concept. The company only released this computerized image of the vehicle.

Chrysler Airflow: Details are sparse on this concept, which we reported on a year ago. Bravely resurrecting the name of the failed, but innovative, 1934 model, Stellantis is saying little about the Airflow concept, other than it is “leading the brand’s transformation to clean mobility and seamlessly connected customer experiences.”

We do know that it uses the underpinnings of the Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivan suggests it could readily be brought to market. Currently Chrysler has two models: the Pacifica and the aging 300. Certainly, the brand’s lack of a clear image and its meager product line-up are ripe for a radical revision, and whatever the Airflow has to offer could be the first step in a reimagining of the brand. More is expected to be revealed at CES, but initial images reveal a concept with has a steeply raked windshield linked to an equally aggressive back end by a coupe-like roofline.

A possible lifeline for Fiat

Fiat 500 and Chrysler Airflow concept CES 2022
The auto company plans to show the new Fiat 500, left, as well as the Chrysler Airflow Concept at the show.

New Fiat 500: While no longer sold in the U.S., despite the presence of Fiat dealers. Unlike the previous electrified 500, dubbed the 500e and sold only in California, the New 500 has a range of up to 199 miles, not the 87-mile range that proved so impractical on the 500e, and comes equipped with an 85-kW fast charge.

Whether it will be brought to the U.S. remains unknown. Fiat dealers have one model in their current U.S. line-up, the 500X, which might explain why they’ve only sold 2,107 vehicles in the first 9 months of 2021. Given its meager line-up, the future of this brand in the U.S. remains questionable. Without new models, such as the New Fiat 500, the risk of consumers being stuck with an orphan will continue to smother sales.

A strong French presence 

Stellantis will also display three vehicles by brands not currently sold in the U.S. Perhaps the most intriguing is the Citroën Ami, a diminutive two-seat urban EV that uses symmetrical parts to keep costs down. Its cube-like shape maximizes its interior shape, and its tiny footprint allows it to recharge in three hours. There’s also the Citroën Skate Mobility Concept, a skateboard platform that can be used as a base for different pods that go on top of it. The company sees this as an autonomous mobility solution in urban centers.

A bit more excitement comes in the form of DS, a Citroën luxury sub-brand that was spun off as a standalone brand in 2015. They are showing the DS E-Tense FE21, a two-time defending champion in the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship. Weighing a mere 1,984 pounds, its 52-kWh battery helps generate 338-hp, resulting in a 2.8-second 0-60 mph time. Sacrebleu!

Other brands MIA — so far

Curiously, Stellantis said nothing about Ram, Dodge, Alfa Romeo, Maserati or others under the Stellantis umbrella. What those brands will display remains to be seen — or not. It is possible that Stellantis is seeking to emphasize Chrysler, so the absence of those brands leaves bandwidth for the Airflow to garner significant press.

Stellantis’s display can be seen virtually on Jan. 3, 2022.

Daimler Getting Back Into Bed With Chrysler for Battery Biz

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Pixfly/Shutterstock

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Daimler is getting cozy with Chrysler again, or at least the American side of Stellantis, so they can tackle battery development and production. Those in the know will recall that Chrysler has been passed around more than a bottle of booze at a middle school party. But its long history of partnerships also kept it in business and resulted in some of its better products.

Before the Amero-French merger that resulted in Stellantis, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles was an Italian-American company with facilities dotted around North America. Prior to that, it was known as DaimlerChrysler – resulting in the LX Platform, Pentastar V6, and a wider variety of Jeep Wranglers. Now, Chrysler’s alienated German wife has shown up on the doorstep with a wad of cash and news that she’ll be investing it into the new battery business. 

Daimler has purchased a 33 percent stake of Automotive Cells Company (AAC), which was established and uncreatively named by Stellantis and TotalEnergies, in a bid to ensure Europe parent isn’t left behind in the electric revolution.

“Mercedes-Benz pursues a very ambitious transformation plan and this investment marks a strategic milestone on our path to CO2 neutrality. Together with ACC, we will develop and efficiently produce battery cells and modules in Europe – tailor-made to the specific Mercedes-Benz requirements,” Ola Källenius, CEO of Daimler AG and Mercedes-Benz AG, explained. “This new partnership allows us to secure supply, to take advantage of economies of scale, and to provide our customers with superior battery technology. On top of that we can help to ensure that Europe remains at the heart of the auto industry – even in an electric era: With Mercedes-Benz as a new partner, ACC aims to more than double capacity at its European sites to support Europe’s industrial competitiveness in the design and manufacturing of battery cells.”

From Daimler:

The entire ACC project will require an investment volume of more than seven billion euros – in a combination of equity, debt and subsidies – to reach a capacity of at least 120 Gigawatt hours in Europe by the end of the decade. Mercedes-Benz will invest a mid-three-digit-million euros amount next year. In total, the investments are expected to remain below one billion Euros. The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including agreement on definitive documentation and regulatory approvals.

The German automaker would like to scale up the development and production of next-generation battery cells and modules so it can keep its promise of being an all-electric company by 2030. However, it said it needs a total battery production capacity of more than 200 Gigawatt hours by that time, requiring it to build at least eight facilities and engage in numerous partnerships.

Following Daimler’s formal investment, the company will have an even 33 percent equity stake in ACC – giving it two of the six Supervisory Board seats and equal footing with Total and Stellantis. It’s expected that hardware will begin manifesting within the next couple of years and be shared among the three companies. For now, Daimler will be providing its “technical and production know-how” to help spur development. But more direct involvement is anticipated when the automaker finishes its Drive Systems Campus finishes construction in 2023, with additional European facilities to be considered later.

[Image: Pixfly/Shutterstock]

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Chrysler is No More as Stellantis Comes to Life

 

Is this the last logo that will use the Chrysler name?

Chrysler is dead.

Perhaps a bit dramatic, but nevertheless, the merger between Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V. and Peugeot S.A. became effective today, resulting in Stellantis N.V. Shares of the newly formed Stellantis begin trading on exchanges in France, Italy and the U.S. starting Monday. All will use the ticker symbol STLA.

The deal has been going through extensive regulatory approvals, twin shareholder votes and the necessary dottings of i’s and crossings of t’s for more than a year.

As of today, that means that for the first time since June 6, 1925, when it was founded by Walter P. Chrysler, the Chrysler name will no longer exist as a corporate entity.

(FCA CEO Manley gets new assignment following Stellantis merger.)

 

Stellantis is alive! The company’s stock begins trading on three exchanges Monday.

In many ways, the Chrysler name was a survivor. The company’s been through a variety of mergers, potential mergers and bankruptcies. It escaped the “merger of equals,” DaimlerChrysler from the late 1990s.

It was essentially spared its life when the late Sergio Marchionne swooped in and offered to keep it going if the U.S. government would help it through bankruptcy in 2009. The final deal got done with Chrysler Group LLC becoming part of FCA US LLC to follow

the naming convention of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V. on Dec. 16, 2014.

Chrysler Corp. fought its way through several near misses when it came to mergers as potential deals with Japanese automaker Mitsubishi, China’s GAC and most recently an effort to merge with Peugeot’s French rival, Renault S.A., a deal that was reportedly scuttled after demands by the French government, which holds an ownership stake in Renault, were too much for then FCA CEO Mike Manley to accept.

(Fiat, PSA set to get EU go-ahead to complete Stellantis merger.)

Then there was the effort by the aforementioned Marchionne to find a partner for FCA, seemingly almost any partner would do. He approached General Motors and was promptly rebuffed. He reportedly got the same treatment from Volkswagen. There was even a rumored dalliance with EV behemoth Tesla, which would have bolstered FCA’s basically non-existent electric vehicle program.

 

The arrival of Stellantis means for the first time in 95 years the Chrysler name won’t be on a corporate marquee.

It also survived a previous bankruptcy in the late 1970s, paying off the loans early with its charismatic CEO Lee Iacocca, who came over from Ford, helping to lead the company’s charge back to prosperity. Chrysler did enjoy one major merger success when it acquired American Motors in 1987, including – and especially – the Jeep brand.

In fact, no one seems certain what the future holds for the Chrysler name period. Early in the process, officials said that all brands would be retained, but time and economics often change the equation and currently, the Chrysler brand offers just two products: the Chrysler Pacifica minivan and 300 sedan. Neither are in segments that are seeing sales gains.

To be fair, there’s been some speculation about the survival of the Fiat name in the same vein. Fiat’s been around even longer, founded in Turin, Italy in 1899. In the U.S., it’s only offering the 500X in 2021.

(Fiat Chrysler and PSA not exactly a “merger of equals.”)

The Chrysler name isn’t the only vestige of FCA seemingly taking a step back as its CEO Mike Manley is no longer in charge, that duty going to PSA’s Carlos Tavares nor will he be on the board of directors as John Elkann, FCA’s chairman, will take that spot as the chairman of the new Stellantis. Manley, 56, is now Head of the Americas.

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Down to Single Model in 2021, is Fiat Long for the U.S. Market?

 

Fiat’s only U.S. offering for the 2021 model-year will be the 500X, a moderately revised version of the Jeep Renegade.

Fans of the Fiat 124 Spider better be racing to showrooms if they want one of the little roadsters as there’ll be no more of them coming to the U.S. market for the 2021 model-year, the automaker has announced.

The subcompact Fiat 500L crossover also is being culled from the line-up for 2021, following the once iconic 500 microcar that vanished after the 2019 model-year. All three products were victims of slow and declining sales.

“For the 2021 model year, the Fiat lineup will feature the Fiat 500X small crossover, which offers unique and functional Italian design, standard all-wheel-drive capability, 9-speed automatic transmission, 30 mpg highway and best-in-class 210 lb-ft of torque,” the Italian brand said in a statement confirming long-standing rumors that, “The Fiat 124 Spider and the Fiat 500L will be discontinued after the 2020 model year.”

For those that follow the industry and, in particular, the Fiat brand, the news was anything but a surprise.

(While its future is uncertain, the Fiat brand is committing heavily to electric powertrains going forward.)

 

Unveiled for 2017, the Fiat 124 Spider brought back a once legendary name, but the roadster was part of a joint venture and shared underpinnings with the latest-generation Mazda Miata.

A decade ago, when Fiat came to the rescue of floundering Chrysler, securing a federal bailout with the merger creating Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, there were high hopes for the Italian brand. It had pulled out of the American market in 1983, a victim of poor quality and increasingly irrelevant products. But FCA’s CEO Sergio Marchionne laid out a grand plan to bring it back, while also building up the Italian company’s more upscale Alfa Romeo and Maserati marques.

But, for the Fiat brand, things went wrong right from the start. The launch of the original 500 model was seriously botched, far fewer dealers lined up than expected, for one thing. Laura Soaves, the executive running the revival was summarily dispatched less than a year later.

Not everything was her fault, however. Soaves had laid out an ambitious target backed by projections that small car sales in the U.S. would nearly double between 2011 and 2014, to around 1 million annually. While soaring fuel prices initially helped move things in the right direction, demand soon lost momentum as Americans by the million shifted from sedans, coupes and hatchbacks to SUVs and CUVs.

(The FCA/PSA deal is not exactly a “merger of equals.”)

Fiat responded with two new entries, the microvan-like 500L and the more utish 500X. While the X did generate some buzz, the L was largely dead on arrival.

 

The launch of the Fiat 500 was a disastrous mess and the addition of an all-electric 500e did little to salvage things.

The brand, as a whole, wasn’t doing much better. In 2012, Fiat’s first full calendar-year in the U.S. market, sales totaled 46,999. Rather than marking a starting point, it would prove to be the automaker’s all-time high. By 2018, sales slipped to 15,521 and tumbled below the five-digit market a year later, to a mere 9,204. So far, this year, demand has been averaging below 400 vehicles a month, sales showing little upward momentum as the overall market has begun recovering from the pandemic’s spring slump.

“Their sales are floundering,” writes analyst Timothy Cain in the automotive research site GoodCarBadCar. Demand has now reached “the lowest mark of the company since their reintroduction to the US market after a 25 year absence.”

During a splashy June 2018 event designed to outline the company’s next five-year strategic plan, CEO Marchionne took pains to say Fiat was here to stay, both in the U.S. and worldwide. But not everyone was convinced by the presentation – which was notably short on detailing future product plans. “There was enough doubt…about their future because they barely showed up in the presentations,” said Joe Phillippi, chief analyst with AutoTrends Consulting, after attending the event in Milan.

Little to nothing has been done since then to improve confidence in the Fiat brand, especially following Marchionne’s unexpected death a month later.

 

Even gussied up concept versions couldn’t do much to build interest in the Fiat 500L which also will vanish for 2021.

His successor, Mike Manley, hasn’t written off Fiat, at least not publicly, but he will have a diminished role come the first quarter of 2021. That’s when Fiat Chrysler and France’s PSA expect to complete the merger that will create Stellantis. The combined company will become the world’s fourth-largest automaker by volume. And it will rival industry top dog Volkswagen Group in terms of its total brand count. The French company not only will bring in familiar Peugeot and Citroen but newer luxury brand DS, as well as the Opel and Vauxhall brands purchased from General Motors a few years back.

PSA’s current CEO Carlos Tavares will retain his role under Stellantis. Ironically, he’s also looking to bring back to the U.S. the French automaker’s flagship Peugeot, which has been out of the market for nearly three decades. Whether Tavares will have patience to rebuild Fiat, as well, is uncertain – though, as the new Stellantis head of the Americas, Manley could argue in its favor – if so inclined.

But there are plenty of observers – and more than a few within FCA – who think the merger will bring to an end the Fiat experiment. Indeed, its future is far from certain worldwide, though it does fare better in some global markets.

(Review: A week with the Fiat 500X.)

For now, the 2021 model-year will see Fiat’s U.S. showrooms selling just the one model, the Fiat 500X a slightly redesigned version of the more popular Jeep Renegade. That said, shoppers looking for bargains may also find steeply discounted leftovers of the 124 roadster and 500L crossover for some time to come.