DETROIT
JANUARY 21 2009 07:50h
Text
That payment was delayed, Henderson said, in part because the automaker was pressed to submit additional information.
GM received an initial $4 billion in emergency funding from the U.S. Treasury on Dec. 31 and had expected to receive its next $5.4-billion payment from the government last Friday.
That payment was delayed, Henderson said, in part because the automaker was pressed to submit additional information. "We expect to receive it in the next several days," Henderson said of the second loan tranche.
Without the scheduled U.S. government loan disbursement, GM would "run out of cash," Henderson said in response to a question about whether the automaker could rule out a bankruptcy filing.
In total, the U.S. government has pledged to loan $13.4 billion to GM for three years provided that it demonstrates that it has a plan to pay back the loans and become viable.
Comment
Auto Outlook: Toyota bullish on U.S. comeback
U..S. shipments to N. Korea grew in 2011
Osama bin Laden is deadPresident Obama announced that Osama bin Laden has been killed on May 1st 2011.
President Obama speaks of bin Laden's death
Islamisation Or Europe: Reality Or Fantasy?
Stuck On Roller Coaster For 3 Hours



WORLD
WORLD
WORLD