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The report said Ford is counting on the strength of the brand to draw bidders.
A spokesman for Ford could not be reached for an immediate comment.
On Monday, Ford said it was reviewing options for Volvo and could sell the luxury Swedish car brand as it looks to shore up cash amid a deep industry downturn. Ford said the review of Volvo was part of its efforts to "strengthen its balance sheet" at a time when auto sales are plunging worldwide.
Indeed on Tuesday, General Motors Corp, Chrysler LLC and Ford posted a drop in combined US sales of nearly 40 per cent for November and warned that the world's largest vehicle market showed signs of tumbling further in 2009.
Ford also asked Congress for up to $9 billion in a government credit line to support its restructuring, saying it expects to break even or be profitable in 2011.
Volvo is the last remaining brand from Ford's former premium auto group that had included the now-divested Aston Martin, Jaguar and Land Rover brands.
Earlier this year, Ford sold its luxury Jaguar and Land Rover brands to India's Tata Motors Ltd. Ford also agreed to sell about two-thirds of its 33.4 per cent stake in Japanese automaker Mazda Motor Corp for around $538 million in November.


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The name of the game now is who makes more money no who sells more.Efficiency is fundamental cocentrate in manufacturing Ford fuel efficient vehicles medium and small in size.Keep the high quatity you have achived,and downsize the world dealer network at least 30 to 35%.The dealers must have a solid financial situation.A high number live on a day to day bases and when economic crisis like the one we are living today comes all they do is unload their inventory at cost in detriment of the rest and the ford product
Ford needs volvo to survive in this horrible economy!
Hope this helps FORD recover and produce better cars