- An Obama Market: What Stocks Could Fare Best
- Time Warner Cable Profit Beats, Sees Q4 Slowdown
- What Obama Is Inheriting—And What He Might Do
- Treasury Boosts Bond Offerings to Counter Crisis
- GlaxoSmithKline Trimming US Sales Force by 1,000
- Economy Shifts, and the Ethanol Industry Reels
- Services Sector Shrinks Sharply in October
- GMAC Has $2.52 Billion Loss; ResCap Survival at Risk
- Bonds Caught Between Safety Bid, Supply Overload
- Obama's Tax Hike For Wealthy—Why Young Should Embrace It
- Obama Wins - What Now for the Markets?
- Sector Targets: Health Care, Clean Tech
- Market In Transition, Sectors Under Fire
- Busch: Congrats Mr. Obama, Now Get To Work
- Alternative Universe For Election Night
- After Obama: Defensive Trades Are Back
- See What People Are Saying About... Obama And The Economy
- Optimistic Jobseekers "Electing" A Come Back?
Chrysler said Saturday that it is looking at a number of global partnerships around the world but declined to comment specifically on reports of a possible merger with General Motors.
"Chrysler LLC as a matter of policy does not confirm or disclose the nature of its private business meetings," Chrysler spokeswoman Lori McTavish said in a statement. "The company is looking at a number of potential global partnerships as it explores growth opportunities around the world."
"Beyond those partnerships already announced however, Chrysler has not formed any new agreements."
Detroit-based GM [GM
Loading...
()
] has had talks with the smaller Chrysler about a merger that would combine the No. 1 and No. 3 American automakers at a time when both are struggling to cut costs and shore up cash, source briefed on the matter have said.






