NEW YORK (Reuters) - CIT Group
Holders of about 90 percent of its unsecured bonds have approved the prepackaged bankruptcy, two sources familiar with the matter said late Friday. The company needed two-thirds approval.
But the company is still counting ballots to see if half of the voting bondholders have approved the deal, a necessary condition, according to a person familiar with the matter.The 101-year old company is widely expected to clear that hurdle, and could file for bankruptcy as soon as this weekend.CIT had been working hard to win bondholder support for its plan to restructure, and earlier Friday announced key agreements with creditors, including support from Carl Icahn, who had previously been the main opponent to the company's plans.
CIT also announced an agreement with Goldman Sachs Group
"It looks like everything is pointing to a prepack," said Adam Steer, an analyst at CreditSights in New York. "Their best option is to turn off the lights and work their balance sheet down. It's pretty clear at this point."
The prepackaged bankruptcy plan involves giving bondholders new debt worth 70 pct of the face value of their old debt, plus giving them an ownership stake in the company equal to about 92.5 percent of the common stock.
Current preferred shareholders, including the government's $2.33 billion paid to CIT under the Troubled Asset Relief Program, will be converted into 5 percent of the company's common stock. Current common shareholders will get 2.5 percent of the new company.
CIT warned last week that if investors did not support its restructuring efforts, it could end up filing for bankruptcy without a plan for how to fix itself. Exiting bankruptcy could take a long time and destroy much of the company, CIT's management said in a presentation.