For Peugeot Chief, History Repeats Itself
Christian Streiff lasted just over two years as chief executive of PSA Peugeot Citroën – but the worst auto market in years set the stage for an acrimonious separation.
Christian Streiff lasted just over two years as chief executive of PSA Peugeot Citroën – but the worst auto market in years set the stage for an acrimonious separation.
What is a wine worth? That question will dog the connoisseurs gathering in Bordeaux this week to sample the 2008 vintage of the world’s finest wines.
As world leaders gather this week, China and other rising powers see the fund as a place to begin staking their claim to a greater voice in economic affairs.
Philippe Varin, chief executive of the Anglo-Dutch steel company Corus, will succeed Christian Streiff at the troubled French carmaker.
Rick Wagoner is stepping down just as President Obama prepares to unveil his rescue plans on Monday for G.M. and the ailing American auto industry.
Rick Wagoner is stepping down just as President Obama prepares to unveil his rescue plans on Monday for G.M. and the ailing American auto industry.
The French automaker PSA Peugeot Citroën is replacing Christian Streiff with a steel industry veteran.
As world leaders gather this week, China and other rising powers see the fund as a place to begin staking their claim to a greater voice in economic affairs.
France’s biggest carmaker, PSA Peugeot-Citroen, said that it had ousted its CEO, Christian Streiff, because new management was needed.
France’s biggest carmaker, PSA Peugeot-Citroen, said that it had ousted its CEO, Christian Streiff, because new management was needed.
Economic woes in the U.S. are emboldening allies and rivals as they question American power on multiple fronts.
As rice imports grow, an aging work force is struggling to eke out a living on tiny plots of land.
The chief executives of the nation’s largest banks told President Obama on Friday that they were committed to helping spur an economic recovery.
British authorities said that they were making progress in their investigation into whether workers in London helped Bernard L. Madoff carry out his Ponzi scheme.
Caution reasserted itself on Wall Street, sending stocks sharply lower but not enough to prevent the market from posting its third consecutive weekly advance.
British authorities said that they were making progress in their investigation into whether workers in London helped Bernard L. Madoff carry out his Ponzi scheme.
Wall Street’s recent bear-market buying spree hit a bump in early trading as investors peeled back some gains from a day earlier.
A windswept airport in the center of France is where the issues plaguing global aviation, from high oil prices to delays in new aircraft, are played out.
Australia cited national security as the reason, but the move is likely to stoke concerns about rising protectionism.
Europe says their safety nets automatically provide the spending that the United States Congress has to legislate.