Berlin - Fiat Chrysler has denied a magazine report saying it's in merger talks with Volkswagen, while the German carmaker said it had no takeovers on its agenda.
Germany's Manager Magazin said on Thursday Volkswagen (VW) chair Ferdinand Piech had held talks with the owners of Fiat Chrysler about buying all or part of the group that was formed this year from the merger of Italian and US carmakers.
The magazine cited unnamed company sources.
However, a VW spokesperson said Europe's biggest carmaker was focused on delivering improvements at its existing operations.
"There are currently no M&A (merger and acquistion) projects on the agenda," he said. "We are now focusing on boosting efficiency across the group."
The Agnelli family's holding firm Exor, which owns a 30-percent stake in Fiat Chrysler, denied any talks had taken place, as did Fiat Chrysler.
Shares in Fiat Chrysler jumped 5 percent to 7.98 euros on the report, but had retreated to stand up 2.2% by 15:52. VW's stock was 1.8% lower.
VW Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn said in March the carmaker, though hoarding almost $24bn in cash, had no plans to expand the group through acquisitions as it was focusing on integrating its 12-brand network.
VW has since sealed a €6.7bn buyout of minority shareholders at Swedish truck division Scania to forge a long-planned alliance of its truck brands.
The report could suggest "diverging views" between VW's management and the supervisory board about the carmaker's future course, said Arndt Ellinghorst, a London-based analyst at investment researchers ISI Group, at a time when Winterkorn, 67, and Piech, 77, are soon likely to face a debate over succession.
Rather than talking about further expansion, top managers at VW - concerned that profitability gains aren't keeping pace with the company's steadily-growing size - have been pushing a new efficiency programme that includes €5bn of cost cuts per year at the core passenger-car brand.
Earlier this month, VW also denied a report it was planning a bid for US truck maker Paccar next year.