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Wednesday, May 23, 2012 | 4:21 a.m.

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FILE - In this June 30, 2011 file photo, Mazda Motor Corp. President and Chief Executive Takashi Yamanouchi speaks at a press conference of its new Demio, known as Mazda2 overseas, in Tokyo.  Mazda and Fiat SpA are working together on developing an manufacturing a roadster, or two-seater convertible, although the automakers will come up with different, distinctly styled models. The Japanese and Italian automakers said in a release Wednesday, May 23, 2012, they had signed an agreement. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae, File)

Mazda, Fiat to work together on small convertible

Mazda Motor Corp. and Fiat SpA are working together on developing and manufacturing a roadster, or two-seater convertible, although the automakers will come up with different, distinctly styled models. The deal with Fiat of Italy, which controls U.S. automaker Chrysler, serves as a perk for a money-losing Mazda, and highlights ...

TransUnion: Late auto-loan payments down in 1Q

The rate of late payments for auto loans fell nationally in the first three months of the year to the lowest level in more than a decade, even as lenders financed more vehicle purchases for high-risk borrowers. For the January to March quarter, the rate of U.S. auto loan payments ...

EU flags wave as they are mirrored at the European Council building in Brussels, Tuesday, May 22, 2012. At Wednesday's informal meeting of the EU's 27 leaders in Brussels, newly elected French President Francois Hollande is expected to push for so-called eurobonds, which can be used to fund investments or boost banks' capital reserves. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

Asia stocks down as worries over Greece grow

Reports that Greece is considering preparations to leave the euro common currency sent Asian stock markets lower Wednesday. Investors have long known of the possibility of a Greek withdrawal from the 17-nation euro currency union as it struggles to meet harsh austerity targets that are a condition of getting international ...

FILE - This Oct. 25, 2011 file photo shows a Ford logo on the tailgate of a pick-up truck, and on a Ford dealership sign at Salem Ford in Salem, N.H. Moody's Investors Service on Tuesday, May 22, 2012 raised Ford's debt ratings to investment-grade for the first time in seven years. The upgrade means that all Ford's assets, including factories and the blue oval logo, are back in the company's hands and will no longer be used to secure the company's debt. Ford posted the assets as collateral in 2006 in order to get a $23.5 billion loan and avoid bankruptcy. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

Ford to get blue oval back after second upgrade

Ford Motor Co. is getting its blue oval logo back. Moody's Investors Service raised Ford's debt ratings to investment-grade Tuesday for the first time in seven years. The upgrade means that all of Ford's U.S. assets, including factories, the blue oval and the trademarks for the F-150 pickup and Mustang ...

Lotus will not get boost increase for race day

Two drivers using Lotus engines will not get any extra power for Sunday's Indianapolis 500. IndyCar officials announced their decision Tuesday after watching Lotus post substantially slower speeds than the Chevrolet- and Honda-powered cars all month and hearing safety concerns from drivers -- including Lotus' own Jean Alesi. Instead, they'll ...

A woman looks at an electronic stock indicator in Tokyo Monday, May 21, 2012. Bargain-hunting helped Asian stock markets edge upward Monday, but gains were limited as investors remained unconvinced that the world's major economies nailed a solution to the European debt crisis following a summit in Washington. Japan's Nikkei 225 index came off four-month lows to rise 0.3 percent at 8,636.89. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi)

Asia stocks mixed after G8 vague on Europe fix

Bargain-hunting helped Asian stock markets edge upward Monday, but gains were limited as investors remained unconvinced that the world's major economies nailed a solution to the European debt crisis following a summit in Washington. Markets posted only muted gains as traders were kept on edge by worries about the economic ...

Europe faces difficult search for growth

On paper at least, European leaders agree: They need stronger growth measures to help their economies expand out of their 2½-year-old government debt crisis. Figuring out exactly what those new steps might be will be the hard part. Persistent political divisions — neatly bridged by a Group of Eight summit ...

Independence ag museum celebrating 5th anniversary

It isn't easy to use the huge map of North America in the entrance of Heartland Acres Agribition Center to plot a course from Independence to Des Moines, or anywhere else, for that matter. There are too many pins with white heads in the way. Thousands are stuck into the ...

Fire risk prompts recall of nearly 87,000 Jeeps

Chrysler is recalling nearly 87,000 Jeep Wranglers in the U.S., Canada and elsewhere due to a risk of fires. The recall affects only Wranglers from the 2010 model year that have automatic transmissions and were built before July 14, 2010, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said in documents posted ...

FILE - In this Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010 file photo an electric car is seen during a demonstration of the California-based company Better Place in Tel Aviv, Israel. Israeli entrepreneur Shai Agassi has developed the world's first nationwide electric car network. After more than $400 million in outlays and more than a year behind schedule, dozens of electric cars have hit the road in Israel, the test site Agassi chose for his Better Place venture. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit, File)

Electric car network gets first test in Israel

Israeli entrepreneur Shai Agassi has begun rolling out the world's first nationwide electric car network. Now, will the drivers come? After more than $400 million in outlays and months behind schedule, dozens of electric cars have hit the road in Israel, the test site Agassi chose for his Better Place ...

FILE - In this April 4, 2012 file photo, Mark Reuss, president of General Motors North America, presents the 2013 Chevrolet Impala at the New York International Auto Show, in New York's Javits Center. In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Reuss discussed GM’s turnaround and its future. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

5 Questions for GM North America chief Mark Reuss

Mark Reuss has arguably the most important job at General Motors. He runs the company's North American business, its largest and most profitable. Lately, the unit has made more than enough money to offset problems in other parts of the world. The veteran engineer took the post in December of ...

An investor reacts as he looks at the stock price monitor at a private securities company Friday May 18, 2012 in Shanghai, China.  Mainland Chinese shares lost ground Friday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.44 percent, or 34.37 points, to 2,344.52. (AP Photo)

European financial woes push markets lower

Concerns that Europe's debt crisis could drag down parts of the continent's banking system rattled global markets on Friday, while the IPO of social network Facebook failed to buoy spirits on Wall Street. Ratings agency Moody's downgraded 16 Spanish banks late Thursday, three days after downgrading 26 Italian lenders, noting ...

World stock markets sink on US, Europe worries

World stocks fell Friday after credit downgrades slapped on Spanish banks unnerved investors already worried about the stability of the 17-country euro currency union. The fall in European shares followed a sharp downturn in Asia where markets were also rattled by weak U.S. manufacturing figures. The nervousness about Spain's banks ...

Biden: Running company not same as leading country

Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday continued a campaign attack on the business practices of presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, saying that his background as an executive doesn't necessarily make him fit to run a country. Biden used an eastern Ohio car dealership as the backdrop to a 30-minute ...

GM's Vauxhall announces new Astra at UK plant

General Motors' Vauxhall plant in northern England will build the company's top-selling Astra vehicles, the automaker said Thursday — a relief for U.K. politicians who had lobbied its American owner to keep the plant open. The announcement comes after workers at the Ellesmere Port plant, near Liverpool, overwhelmingly backed a ...

Construction workers build an apartment complex in Lawrence, Kan., Wednesday, May 16, 2012. U.S. builders started work on more homes and apartments last month and requested more permits to build single-family homes. The increases suggest the battered housing market is healing. The Commerce Department said Wednesday that builders broke ground in April at a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 717,000 homes. That's a 2.6 percent increase from an upwardly revised March figure and near January's three-year high of 720,000. Construction rose for both single-family homes and apartments.  (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)

US economy picks up after early spring slump

Maybe the U.S. economy's strength this winter wasn't just weather-related after all. Home construction is near a three-year high. And factory output has risen in three of the year's first four months. The data released Wednesday suggest growth in the April-June quarter is off to a good start, helped by ...

FILE - In this April 16, 2012 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann, are seen outside Fenway Park baseball stadium in Boston. Don’t bet on Mitt Romney winning his home state. Or even trying. “That’s not been a topic of discussion,” Romney campaign adviser Kevin Madden said when asked if the Republican former Massachusetts governor would compete in the heavily Democratic state.   (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Don't bet on Mitt Romney winning in Massachusetts

Don't bet on Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney winning his home state or even trying. "That's not been a topic of discussion," Romney campaign adviser Kevin Madden said when asked if the former Massachusetts governor would compete in the heavily Democratic state. Aides say there are other ways he can ...

Gov't proposal aimed at bus, truck rollovers

Manufacturers would have to equip large trucks and buses with safety systems that help prevent rollover accidents through computer-controlled braking, under regulations proposed Wednesday by the government. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's proposal would require electronic stability control in new trucks and buses, including motorcoaches. The safety system senses ...

Subaru expanding Ind. plant to increase production

Subaru announced plans Wednesday for a $75 million expansion of its central Indiana factory in order to increase production of its Outback and Legacy models. Construction work on the expansion of the factory near Lafayette is expected to begin this summer, with the company saying it anticipated adding up to ...

US factory output rose in April on stronger autos

U.S. factory output increased in April, helped by a gain in auto production. Busier factories have driven stronger hiring this year and helped the economy grow. The Federal Reserve said Wednesday that factory production rose 0.6 percent in April, erasing a 0.5 percent decline in March. Half of the April ...

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