PR Newswire
NEW YORK, April 30, 2026
Important Information Regarding Section 20(a) Individual Liability Claims
NEW YORK, April 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- SueWallSt alerts investors in Stellantis N.V. (NYSE: STLA) of a pending securities class action naming four senior officers as individual defendants.
Class Period: February 26, 2025 through February 5, 2026
Find out if you qualify to recover losses or contact Joseph E. Levi, Esq. at jlevi@SueWallSt.com | (888) SueWallSt.
Stellantis shares fell $2.26 per share, a 23.69% single-day decline, after the Company disclosed €22 billion in charges and a shortfall against guided adjusted operating income benchmarks on February 6, 2026. The Court has set June 8, 2026 as the deadline to apply for lead plaintiff appointment.
The Named Individual Defendants
The complaint identifies four Stellantis officers as individual defendants under Section 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which imposes liability on persons who "controlled" the entity that violated the securities laws:
Section 20(a) Control Person Framework
Section 20(a) provides that every person who directly or indirectly controlled any person liable under the Exchange Act is jointly and severally liable. The action contends each Individual Defendant possessed the power and authority to control the contents of Stellantis' SEC filings, press releases, and presentations to analysts and institutional investors. Each was provided copies of the Company's public reports prior to issuance and had the ability to prevent their release or cause corrections.
Sarbanes-Oxley Certification Obligations
The complaint further alleges that individual defendants who served as CEO and CFO signed Sarbanes-Oxley certifications under Sections 302 and 906, personally attesting that:
The action asserts these certifications were made while defendants knew or should have known that Stellantis was not positioned to achieve its guided AOI benchmarks and that the Company's electrification strategy would require billions in restructuring charges.
"Corporate officers have a duty to ensure their companies' public statements are accurate and complete. When officers certify financial disclosures under Sarbanes-Oxley, they accept personal responsibility for the truthfulness of those statements." — Joseph E. Levi, Esq.
Scienter Allegations
As averred, the Individual Defendants had access to material non-public information about deteriorating operational performance, the insufficiency of BEV demand projections, and the scale of restructuring that would ultimately be required. The pleading asserts they knew that positive representations about Stellantis' earnings trajectory were materially false or misleading when made.
Speak with an attorney about recovering your Stellantis investment losses or call (888) SueWallSt.
SueWallSt — Top 50 securities litigation firm (ISS, seven consecutive years). Over 70 professionals. Hundreds of millions recovered.
Frequently Asked Questions About the STLA Lawsuit
Q: Who are the defendants named in the STLA lawsuit? A: The complaint names Stellantis N.V. and individual defendants including Executive Chairman John Jacob Philip Elkann, former CFO Douglas R. Ostermann, CEO Antonio Filosa, and CFO Joao Laranjo, all of whom signed SEC filings or made public statements during the Class Period.
Q: Who is eligible to join the STLA investor lawsuit? A: Investors who purchased STLA stock between February 26, 2025 and February 5, 2026 and suffered financial losses may be eligible. Eligibility is based on purchase date and documented losses, not on whether you still hold the shares.
Q: What is a lead plaintiff and why does it matter? A: A lead plaintiff is the investor appointed by the court to represent the entire class. Lead plaintiffs are typically investors with the largest documented losses. Being appointed does not increase individual recovery but gives direct oversight of how the case is run.
Q: What does it cost me to participate? A: Nothing. Securities class actions are handled on a pure contingency basis. No upfront fees, no retainer, no out-of-pocket costs.
Q: What if I already sold my STLA shares — can I still recover losses? A: Yes. Eligibility is based on when you purchased, not whether you still hold them. Investors who bought during the class period and sold at a loss may still participate.
Q: How long will the lawsuit take to resolve? A: Securities class actions typically take two to four years from initial filing to resolution.
CONTACT:
Levi & Korsinsky, LLP
Joseph E. Levi, Esq.
33 Whitehall Street, 27th Floor
New York, NY 10004
Tel: (888) SueWallSt
Fax: (212) 363-7171
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SOURCE SueWallSt.com