The New York-based financier to small and mid-sized businesses faces a liquidity crisis absent help from the government, according to analysts.
CIT is still awaiting word on whether it will receive funds from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, which lets cash-squeezed companies issue government-backed bonds to raise capital at a lower cost. As of June 8, the program has backed $335.4 billion of debt.
FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair has said that the program tries to be inclusive but applicants must meet certain requirements. Generally, the program gives preference to companies with high credit ratings or that are considered pivotal to the overall economy. CIT spokesman Curt Ritter confirmed Friday that the company's application to the FDIC program remains outstanding.
"We continue to be in discussions with the government," he said.
Still, analysts are increasingly concerned that CIT will not be granted access to the TLGP program, which may put bondholders at risk as more of CIT's outstanding debt comes due.
It is "highly unlikely" that CIT will get additional government help such as access to the bond-guarantee program, CreditSights analysts David Hendler and Adam Steer said.
"We cannot come up with an overly compelling reason why the FDIC would want to put its capital at risk to support CIT," they wrote in a research note earlier this week. "CIT is not in our view a systemic institution."
Shares of CIT fell 33 cents, or 18 percent, to $1.53 in late afternoon trading and earlier hit a 52-week low of $1.13. The shares have lost nearly 70 percent of their value in 2009.
CIT already received $2.3 billion in government bailout funds in December, as part of the $700 billion rescue fund created by Congress last October. It had to convert to a bank holding company to access the money.
The lender faces maturing debt of $7.4 billion in the first quarter of 2010, plus other obligations, and options are running low for the company to raise capital, Hendler and Steer said. They contend that it will be difficult for CIT to tap funds through a stock sale and other financing is scarce.