NEW YORK (Reuters) - CIT Group Inc
The company said that, without a debt exchange or an orderly bankruptcy, the company would have to liquidate, an expensive process that could leave unsecured bondholders with somewhere between 6 cents and 37 cents on the dollar. These bonds were trading just above 60 cents on the dollar earlier on Friday.
"Let's be clear. A free-fall bankruptcy will ... result in a lower recovery for today's unsecured bondholder," CIT Chairman and Chief Executive Jeffrey Peek said in a pre- recorded webcast presentation.CIT's restructuring plans were almost immediately slammed by billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who snapped up CIT debt in the past few months to become what he says is the company's largest bondholder.
New York-based CIT is trying to restructure its debt through getting debt holders to exchange their debt, or to agree to a pre-packaged bankruptcy. It is also looking to boost a $3 billion secured credit facility by another $4.5 billion.
Once the company restructures its liabilities, it can try to move some of its businesses into its regulated bank subsidiary and fund them with deposits instead of bonds.
Icahn said a better plan is to try to move businesses into the bank within nine months. If that does not happen, the company should wind itself down and pay out proceeds to debt holders. Icahn said that, if the company pays off its debt with money from maturing assets, his bonds could be worth 80 cents to 85 cents on the dollar.
"CIT would have you believe that a bankruptcy would be calamitous. We do not believe this to be the case," said Icahn, who made much of his fortune over the years buying controlling stakes in distressed companies.
Icahn has been increasingly active in companies in bankruptcy court this year. This summer, he was approved by a court to provide part of the bankruptcy financing for auto parts maker Lear Corp, a company he had once had a large equity position in and tried to acquire. He also received approval from a bankruptcy court to buy Tropicana Casino and Resort in Atlantic City.