Billionaire investor Carl Icahn offered a $6 billion lifeline to struggling lender CIT Group Inc., one of America's largest lenders to small and mid-sized companies.
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn offered a $6 billion lifeline to struggling lender CIT Group Inc., one of America's largest lenders to small and mid-sized companies.
In a letter Monday to CIT's board of directors, Icahn said he would give the company the loan to replace a debt restructuring plan CIT has submitted to its bondholders for approval.
Icahn, who is a CIT bondholder, said in his letter the $6 billion loan would save the company $150 million in fees. He also criticized the board for pushing an exchange offer that he said unfairly favors large bondholders at the expense of smaller investors and that also undervalues the company.
CIT shares jumped 14 cents, or 12.5 percent, to $1.26 in afternoon trading.
Michael Gallo, a partner and head of the finance group at the law firm DeCotiis FitzPatrick Cole & Wisler LLP, questioned the potential effectiveness of Icahn's loan offer.
"The whole intent of the (debt restructuring) is to reduce debt," Gallo said. "Replacing a loan with another loan doesn't really do it."
Icahn's loan would essentially help repay existing debt that will mature in the near future. That would leave CIT still on the hook to repay the new money borrowed from Icahn.
"It's just forestalling the inevitable," Gallo said of Icahn's loan proposal.
On Friday, CIT sweetened a debt offer it launched earlier in the month in hopes of getting bondholders to swap out current debt for debt that matures later and stock in the company. The proposed restructuring is aimed at reducing CIT's near-term debt burden by $5.7 billion.
CIT is also asking bondholders to approve a prepackaged reorganization plan should it need to file for bankruptcy protection.
Icahn said his loan would allow bondholders to reject the restructuring plan and the prepackaged reorganization plan.
The revised restructuring plan would also give the government, which has already provided CIT $2.3 billion in aid, a 5.4 percent stake in CIT, up from the 2.4 percent proposed in the original plan.
Because CIT is one of the largest U.S. lenders to the retail industry, some economists say the company's potential collapse could hurt a U.S. economy struggling to recover from recession.
Its customers range from Dunkin' Donuts franchisees to department store operator Dillards Inc. It is also a short-term financier to about 2,000 vendors that supply merchandise to 300,000 stores, according to the National Retail Federation.
Garth Snider, president of FranchiseOpportunities, an online advertising firm that works with small businesses that receive financing from CIT, said its customers need some certainty about its future.
"We want to see something decided, and decided in short order," Snider said.
CIT's losses have been mounting as its borrowing costs have outstripped its income amid the credit crunch. It received $2.3 billion in federal bailout money last fall and a $3 billion emergency loan in July from some of its largest bondholders.
Current common shareholders will own about 2.5 percent of CIT if the exchange offer is completed. The remainder of the company would be owned by bond holders participating in the new debt exchange.
CIT had $54.09 billion in outstanding long-term borrowings as of June 30, including $13.85 billion due by June 30, 2010.
Jeffrey Peek, CIT's chairman and CEO, announced last week he would retire at the end of the year. Peek, 62, has worked at CIT since 2003. Some analysts said his departure was a sign the company might be heading toward a bankruptcy protection filing.