PARIS/MILAN — PSA Group and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles have named the 11 members of the board of directors of Stellantis, the new company that will result from the automakers’ merger.
Carlos Tavares, the CEO of PSA and the future CEO of Stellantis, is on the board, but Mike Manley, CEO of FCA, is not.
As part of the automakers’ combination agreement signed in December 2019, the board will only have two executive members. These are Tavares and John Elkann, current FCA chairman. FCA has previously said Manley’s role within Stellantis will be announced “before the merger completion.”
Elkann, who is the head of FCA parent company Exor, will be the chairman of the board. Robert Peugeot, the head of the Peugeot family companies and a member of PSA’s supervisory board, will be the vice chairman.
Andrea Agnelli, president of the Italian football club Juventus and a member of the Agnelli-Elkann family that controls FCA, is the second board member representing FCA. Agnelli is a cousin of John Elkann.
As agreed to in the terms of the companies’ combination agreement in December 2019, each automaker has nominated five members in addition to Tavares; of the 11, seven are considered independent.
One board member nominated by each company will represent employees.
The senior independent director will be Henri de Castries, former CEO of the insurer AXA and a board member at a number of companies including Nestle.
The other six independent board members are:
- Fiona Clare Cicconi (FCA), representing FCA employees and head of human resources at AstraZeneca
- Nicolas Dufourcq (PSA), the general manager of Bpifrance, the French government investment fund, which holds 12 percent of PSA.
- Ann Frances Godbehere (PSA), director at Royal Dutch Shell and a former financial executive
- Wan Ling Martello (FCA), former executive vice president at Nestle
- Jacques de Saint-Exupery (PSA), representing PSA employees and the head of the workers’ committee at PSA
- Kevin Scott (FCA), the chief technical officer of Microsoft.
The merger of PSA and FCA, which would create the fourth-largest automotive manufacturer by volume, was announced in the autumn of 2019 and is expected to close in the first quarter of 2021.