Ford Motor Co. Chief Executive and President Alan Mulally (L), Executive Chairman Bill Ford (2nd L), President of the Americas Mark Fields and Group Vice President of Product Development Derrick Kuzak (R) pose next to the 2010 Taurus sedan during press days at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, Jan. 11, 2009.
CHICAGO, Jan. 29 (Xinhua) -- Ford Motor Company on Thursday reported a fourth quarter net loss of 5.9 billion U.S. dollars, compared with a loss of 2.8 billion dollars in the same period of 2007.
"Ford and the entire auto industry faced an extraordinary slowdown in all major global markets in the fourth quarter that clearly had an impact on our results," said Ford President and CEO Alan Mulally in a statement.
The second-biggest U.S. automaker posted a total loss of 14.6 billion dollars in 2008.
Based on current planning assumptions, Ford reiterated it has sufficient liquidity to fund its business plan and product investments. Ford said it finished 2008 with 24 billion dollars inavailable Automotive liquidity, including 13.4 billion dollars in Automotive gross cash.
Ford's fourth quarter revenue plunged to 29.2 billion dollars from 45.5 billion dollars a year ago as the economic woes pared the company's U.S. sales by 30 percent.
But the company reconfirmed that, based on current planning assumptions, it does not need a bridge loan from the U.S. government, barring a significantly deeper economic downturn or a significant industry event, such as the bankruptcy of a major competitor that causes disruption to the company's supply base, dealers or creditors.
GM and Chrysler had asked for and received low-interest loans from the federal government to keep themselves afloat.
Also on Thursday, Ford said the United Auto Workers union has agreed to end the "jobs bank" at Ford, known as the Job Security program. The company and the union presently are working out the details of implementation.