chefdennis
Veteran Expediter
Well it looks like CIT is not TOO big to fail!! Here are a few articles over the last few days...if they go BK, this will hit Main Street hard. They hold alot of mortages and credit lines for the majory porition of small franchise businesses and alot of mid size businesses also...if those businesses can't get to their line of credit, that means alot of unpaid employess at your fav subway, dunkin Dounut, applebees and such!! Not good!! No one wants to see small business that the hit, but i guess they don't have enough "union members all totaled together to get barry to play along again.......
Major Lender Faces Crunch
CIT Hires Bankruptcy Adviser as Payment Looms; Financier to 1 Million Businesses
JULY 11, 2009
By JEFFREY MCCRACKEN and SERENA NG
Fed to Blame for CIT's Liquidity Problems: Forbes
By: CNBC.com | 14 Jul 2009 | 09:21 AM ET
Fed to Blame for CIT's Liquidity Problems: Forbes - Companies * US * News * Story - CNBC.com
CIT says government will not give it another bailout
By DANIEL WAGNER Associated Press
July 15, 2009, 5:26PM
CIT says government will not give it another bailout | Business | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle
CIT says government will not give it another bailout | Business | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle[/QUOTE]
CIT Announces That Discussions with Government Agencies Have Ceased
JULY 15, 2009 6:03 PM ET
Government will not give lender CIT 2nd bailout
By DANIEL WAGNER
AP Business Writer
Major Lender Faces Crunch
CIT Hires Bankruptcy Adviser as Payment Looms; Financier to 1 Million Businesses
JULY 11, 2009
By JEFFREY MCCRACKEN and SERENA NG
CIT Group Inc., a lender to almost a million mostly small and midsize businesses across the country, is preparing for a possible bankruptcy filing after so far failing to win a government guarantee to help it borrow, said people familiar with the matter.
To prepare for a possible filing, CIT has retained the law firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, which has a prominent bankruptcy practice, these people said.
The mere hiring of bankruptcy counsel doesn't mean a company will actually make a bankruptcy filing. CIT has been pressing its case "with increased urgency to the government," said a person familiar with the matter, and is hopeful because "the government has not said absolutely no to anything."
CIT has a $1 billion payment due in mid-August and it is unclear the company "will be able to handle that," said this person. The company will give more guidance when it discusses second quarter earnings in two weeks.
CIT declined to comment on whether it was preparing a filing or why it had retained Skadden Arps. But if CIT did file, the consequences could be considerable, because the 101-year-old company, as of March 31, had $68 billion of liabilities.
CIT is registered as a bank holding company and has a bank in Utah with roughly $3.5 billion in deposits. But to get most of its funds to lend, it has historically relied on bonds and the short-term debt market known as commercial paper. It has been largely unable to tap the credit markets since mid 2007 and is trying to raise more money through its bank.
The New York-based lender has been stuck for months in a bureaucratic tangle over government assistance. It received $2.3 billion from the federal Troubled Asset Relief Program in December, after winning approval to become a bank holding company. But CIT has so far been unable to access another federal program, one that helps banks and thrifts sell debt with government guarantees. Access to that program would enable CIT, which has a below-investment-grade, or "junk," credit rating, to sell bonds at a low interest rate.
CIT confirmed Friday that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which oversees the debt guarantee program, has yet to approve its application. CIT said that its application to the FDIC remains outstanding and the company "continues to be in active dialogue with the government."
A bankruptcy filing by CIT could affect thousands of small borrowers, from Dunkin' Donuts franchisees to restaurant owners and clothing retailers. "If CIT were to go away, it would take a financing option away from franchisees who want to buy stores or expand their networks," said Kate Lavelle, chief financial officer of Dunkin' Brands, the which owns Dunkin' Donuts and has had a 50-year relationship with CIT.
On Friday, many CIT bonds slumped on heavy trading, and its stock tumbled to its lowest since the lender went public in 2002, further hurting its chances of raising capital from the private sector without more government aid. CIT bonds that mature in February 2010 were trading at 83.5 cents on the dollar and yielding over 40%, indicating that debt investors think it is unlikely they will be repaid in full. CIT shares sank 33 cents, or 18%, to $1.53, after dipping as low as $1.13 during the day.
The company's most pressing issue, said those familiar with the situation, is that it has a debt payment coming due in August. In all, CIT has about $2.7 billion that comes due this year and $8 billion more due next year.
The FDIC has been considering CIT's application for a federal debt guarantee since January and hasn't reached a decision. The agency is concerned about CIT's deteriorating financial position and operating losses.
A few months ago, CIT hired former Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman and his boutique investment bank Evercore Partners to try to get more TARP funds or find another financial solution with the government, said the people familiar with the matter.
One problem with getting more aid is that the government has made it clear it doesn't see the company as a systemic risk to the financial system. The people familiar with the matter said the government feels that other lenders, such as J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. or Deutsche Bank AG, can handle many of the same loans that CIT specializes in, such as loans to small retailers or rail-car leasing firms.
Meanwhile, competitors like GE Capital Corp. and GMAC LLC have been able to sell debt with the backing of the government's top credit rating.
According to confidential documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, CIT has in recent weeks tried to assess the consequences of a failure of the lender on Middle America. Among them: Companies would lose access to $4 billion in untapped credit lines and thousands of manufacturers could run into problems.
CIT competes with the likes of Wells Fargo, Bank of America, General Electric Capital Corp. and regional banks in the sectors in which it is active. But many CIT customers say that the lender is often willing to make loans to businesses and borrowers that most banks typically shun. CIT now ranks 20th among U.S. bank holding companies, with assets of over $75 billion.
Founded in 1908, CIT, which used to be known as Commercial Investment Trust, has had a somewhat tumultuous history, its fortunes rising and falling during past credit cycles. In the 1990s it expanded into areas such as manufactured housing and financing technology equipment, only to get burned when those bubbles burst.
In 2001, following the dot-com bust, the company was acquired by Tyco International Ltd. , but was spun off in mid-2002 when Tyco became ensnared in an accounting scandal.
In 2003, CIT appointed its current chairman and chief executive, Jeffrey Peek, a former Merrill Lynch executive. Under his leadership, it expanded consumer-finance activities such as student lending. It also increased its presence in subprime mortgage lending during the credit boom.
When the credit crunch hit, the company rushed to leave those two businesses, concentrating instead on lending to small businesses and midsize companies, leasing railcars and providing cash advances to manufacturers and companies in exchange for their receivables.
"They are our sole financing partner and we are heavily reliant on them," said Haresh Tharani, founder and president of the Tharanco Group, a company in the apparel business.
Tharanco has a loan from CIT and also gets cash advances from the lender for its receivables. "I worry about the company.... If CIT fails, it would be detrimental to the confidence of many businesses," Mr. Tharani said.
Major Lender Faces Crunch - WSJ.com
Fed to Blame for CIT's Liquidity Problems: Forbes
By: CNBC.com | 14 Jul 2009 | 09:21 AM ET
Fed to Blame for CIT's Liquidity Problems: Forbes - Companies * US * News * Story - CNBC.com
The Federal Reserve should have focused on getting the securitization market working again, as it promised last autumn, to avoid situations like that in which lender CIT Group is now, Steve Forbes, CEO of Forbes, told CNBC Tuesday.
CIT Group has 1 million clients which include big names from the franchisee of Dunkin' Donuts to retailer Dillard's. Analysts fear that its collapse could deal a devastating blow to the economy by cutting off financing even more.
"CIT would have never have been in this trouble if the Federal Reserve had gotten the securitization market working again," Forbes told "Squawk Box."
Banks have now been recapitalized and have three times more cash than they did last September when Lehman Brothers collapsed but "what we have here, in terms of the rest of the market, in terms of securitization… that thing isn't working yet," he added.
CIT got $2.3 billion in bailout cash last year and is in talks with regulators about receiving more government help.
CNBC.com
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One option would be to include the lender, which turned into a bank holding company last year, in the Federal Deposit Insurance's Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program – but analysts say the government would not like this solution.
Forbes also said he was against bailing out individual companies but insisted the Fed should have done a better job to ensure this does not happen.
"The Federal Reserve has got to make a distinction… buying long-term Treasurys is useless," he said. "In terms of getting the securitization market going, they should have done this 3-4 months ago, we wouldn't be in this mess now."
"They should have aggressively moved on mortgage-backed securities, which they promised to do in November and never did," Forbes added.
CIT says government will not give it another bailout
By DANIEL WAGNER Associated Press
July 15, 2009, 5:26PM
CIT says government will not give it another bailout | Business | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle
WASHINGTON — Struggling commercial lender CIT Group says the government will not give it another bailout.
The news increases the likelihood of a bankruptcy filing for CIT, a lender to small- and mid-sized businesses that faces a liquidity crunch. The announcement comes after days of round-the-clock negotiations about a possible rescue for the company.
CIT has warned that its failure could prolong the economic crisis by imperiling roughly one million businesses that depend on it for credit.
The New York-based company’s release says CIT is “evaluating alternatives.”
CIT received $2.3 billion from the $700 billion financial system bailout.
CIT says government will not give it another bailout | Business | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle[/QUOTE]
CIT Announces That Discussions with Government Agencies Have Ceased
JULY 15, 2009 6:03 PM ET
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CIT Group Inc. (NYSE: CIT - News), a leading provider of financing to small businesses and middle market companies, today announced that it has been advised that there is no appreciable likelihood of additional government support being provided over the near term.
The Company’s Board of Directors and management, in consultation with its advisors, are evaluating alternatives.
CIT Announces That Discussions with Government Agencies Have Ceased - Yahoo! Finance
Government will not give lender CIT 2nd bailout
By DANIEL WAGNER
AP Business Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Obama administration drew a line in the
sand on financial bailouts Wednesday, denying emergency aid to CIT
Group Inc., a struggling commercial lender on the brink of
bankruptcy.
After days of round-the-clock talks with regulators about a
possible government bailout, CIT late Wednesday said those
negotiations had ceased. The company said its management and
directors were "evaluating alternatives."
When asked about CIT, a Treasury Department spokeswoman said in
an e-mailed statement that "even during periods of financial
stress, we believe that there is a very high threshold for
exceptional government assistance to individual companies."
With its assets deteriorating and dangerously little cash on
hand, the news left CIT with few options outside of bankruptcy. A
filing could come as early as Wednesday night, analysts said.
CIT is one of the nation's largest lenders to small and mid-size
businesses. The company has warned that its failure could imperil
about a million corporate borrowers, including retailers,
restaurants and airlines.
The New York-based company was negotiating with officials from
the Treasury, Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
for much of the week. An agreement on aid appeared close at midday
Wednesday.
But trading of CIT's shares was halted Wednesday afternoon.
The company had deteriorated so far that officials feared even a
short-term loan from Treasury's financial bailout might not save
it, according industry and government officials who spoke on the
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss
the matter.
"I think it makes a bankruptcy filing a near certainty," said
longtime banking analyst Bert Ely. "It's quite possible they could
file before trading on Thursday."
CIT already received $2.3 billion from the $700 billion
financial system bailout.
A spokesman for the Fed declined to comment. A spokesman for the
FDIC could not be reached for comment Wednesday evening.