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    Fiat

    Italian company
    Also known as: Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino
    Written and fact-checked byThe Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree. They write new content and verify and edit content received from contributors.
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      Sergio Marchionne
      Open full sized image
      Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne with a Fiat 500, 2007.
      Giuseppe Carcace/Getty Images
      formerly:
      Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino, Fiat SpA, and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles
      Ticker:
      STLA
      Share price:
      $7.75 (mkt close, Feb. 13, 2026)
      Market cap:
      $22.39 bil.
      Annual revenue:
      $146.12 bil.
      Earnings per share (prev. year):
      $-0.71
      Sector:
      Consumer Discretionary
      Industry:
      Automobiles
      CEO:
      Mr. Antonio Filosa
      Headquarters:
      Turin

      Fiat, major Italian manufacturer ofautomobiles that is a subsidiary of the multinationalautomobile manufacturer Stellantis. Among its automotive names wereChrysler, Ferrari,Maserati, and Lancia. The company also had interests in retailing, chemicals, andcivil engineering in addition tomanufacturing farm equipment and earth-moving machinery. Headquarters are inTurin.

      (Read Lee Iacocca’s Britannica entry on Chrysler.)

      Fiat was incorporated in 1906 as the successor to a company formed in 1899 byGiovanni Agnelli. Because of the high level of skilled workers in Turin and the local school of engineering, the company was able to gain an early lead on its competitors.

      Giovanni Agnelli
      Open full sized image
      Giovanni Agnelli, founder of Fiat.
      Cittádi Torino Archive

      The success of Fiat was in large part the work of two men. Founder Giovanni Agnelli, whose family still holds a major interest in its successor firm Stellantis, led the company from its formative years until his death in 1945. An intellectual socialist, he saw theautomotive industry as a means of providing transportation to the masses as well as producing jobs for workers. This odd combination ofsocialism and industrialism proved to be a potent combination in the Italian automotive industry. By 1910 the firm was the largest inItaly, a position it has maintained since. The other major figure in the firm’s development wasVittorio Valletta, an unusually skilled administrator who, as general manager, guided the day-to-day activities of the company. By the early 1920s Fiat was manufacturing more than 80 percent of the automobiles sold in Italy, and the company maintained this near monopoly of the domestic market in the decades afterWorld War II.

      Fiat 600
      Open full sized image
      The Fiat 600, introduced in 1956, was an inexpensive, practical car with simple, elegant styling that instantly made it an icon of postwar Italy. Its rear-mounted transverse engine produced sufficient power and saved enough space to allow the passenger compartment to accommodate four people easily.
      © Rossi—REX/Shutterstock.com

      In 1979 the corporation converted to aholding company by spinning off a number of autonomous companies covering various separate operations. In 1986 Fiat acquiredAlfa Romeo SpA, an ailing Italian company that manufactured sports cars. Fiat, once the largest auto company in Europe, began to face stiff competition from larger and more global rivals, such as Volkswagen Group (Volkswagen AG), from the late 1980s. In 2000 the American automobile companyGeneral Motors Corporation (GM) acquired a 20 percent stake in Fiat in a technology-sharing deal; in 2005 GM paid $2 billion to terminate the partnership. In June 2009 Fiat finalized a deal withChrysler LLC in which it acquired most of the troubled American automaker’s assets as well as a 20 percent stake in the company; its share could increase if certain requirements were met. The deal resulted in the formation of a new company,Chrysler Group LLC. In 2010 Fiat announced that it was spinning off its industrial unit, which produced trucks and tractors as well as marine equipment, in order to focus on automobiles. The following year Fiat became the majority shareholder in Chrysler after acquiring the remaining stakes held by the U.S. and Canadian governments, and in 2014 it purchased the outstanding shares to assume full ownership to form Fiat Chrysler Automobiles. In 2021 Fiat Chrysler merged with the French companyPSA Group to form Stellantis.

      The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated byErik Gregersen.

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