Fiat agrees to buy up rest of Chrysler
The Italian motors giant Fiat has agreed to buy the remaining 41% of Chrysler it does not own in a move that will create the world's seventh-largest car company.
Fiat has owned a majority stake in the US company since 2009.
The agreement ends drawn-out negotiations with the current owners, Veba, the healthcare trust affiliated to the United Auto Workers' union.
Chrysler and Fiat will pay the trust an initial $3.65bn (£2.2bn).
Once the deal is signed off, Chrysler will pay Fiat another $700m.
Fiat's chief executive, Sergio Marchionne, plans to widen the company's global reach.
The Veba trust looks after medical benefits for retired Chrysler workers.
The alliance between the two companies came amid the major restructuring of the US car industry following the financial crisis of the late 2000s.
Recently, Chrysler reported a 22% rise in third-quarter profits to $464m, with net revenue up 13.5% to $17.6bn.
The company said its results had been helped by strong sales of its Jeep Grand Cherokee and the Ram 1500 pickup.
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