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CIT Group
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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{{short description|American banking and financial services company}}{{Distinguish|Citigroup|CITIC Group}}{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2013}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
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History
Founding and early history
On February 11, 1908, Henry Ittleson founded the Commercial Credit and Investment Company in St. Louis, Missouri to finance accounts receivable at small companies.NEWS,weblink C.I.T. Likes to Take Its Time, Karen W., Arenson, The New York Times, July 27, 1979, subscription, In 1915, the company moved its headquarters to New York City and renamed itself Commercial Investment Trust (CIT). By that time, the company provided financing for wholesale suppliers and producers of consumer goods. The company added automobile financing to its product line in 1916 through an agreement with Studebaker, the first of its kind in the auto industry. During World War I, CIT financed the manufacture of 150 submarine chasers. It also added consumer financing of radios through an agreement with Thomas Edison, Inc. During the Roaring Twenties following the war, consumer spending rose dramatically and CIT prospered in its consumer appliance, furniture, and automobile financing groups. In 1924, CIT incorporated in Delaware and became a public company via an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange. CIT began offering factoring in 1928 and expanded operations into Europe in 1929.NEWS,weblink CHRONOLOGY: A century of CIT, from St Louis to New York, Reuters, November 1, 2009, With international tensions rising prior to World War II, CIT closed its German operations in 1934. Arthur O. Dietz succeeded Ittleson as president of the company in 1939. During the war, CIT offered its 2,000 employees a month's bonus, life insurance, and a guaranteed job on return if they served in the United States Armed Forces. Between 1947 and 1950, the company's net income rose from $7.3 million to $30.8 million. Ittleson died at age 77 on October 27, 1948.1950s - 1990s
In 1957, the company moved into a new building at 650 Madison Avenue in Manhattan. In 1958, to diversify, the company acquired Picker X-Ray Corporation, maker of X-ray and radiation equipment, for $1.9 million.NEWS,weblink C. I. T. Acquires Picker X-Ray In Move Toward Diversification; Purchase Price Is About $1,900,000 Hartford Insurance Eyes Merger With Columbian National Life COMPANIES PLAN SALES, MERGERS, The New York Times, August 2, 1958, subscription, In 1960, Walter Lundell succeeded Dietz as president of the company. In 1964, it acquired Gibson Greeting Cards for $36 million.NEWS,weblink C.I.T. PURCHASES GIBSON GREETING; Financing Concern Getting Oldest Card Producer, The New York Times, January 10, 1964, subscription, In 1965, it acquired Meadow Brook Bank for $106.7 million in stock. In 1969, CIT entered the personal and home equity loan and leasing business and left auto financing. In 1979, restrictive banking rules forced CIT to sell its bank, National Bank of North America. CIT was acquired by RCA Corporation in 1980. RCA promptly sold CIT's four manufacturing businesses: Picker X-Ray, Inc., Gibson Greeting Cards, Inc., All-Steel, Inc. (office furniture), and Raco, Inc. (wall boxes for electric switches and outlets.) The Madison Avenue building was sold in 1982 as the company moved to a newly constructed headquarters facility in Livingston, New Jersey in 1983.In 1984, CIT was sold to Manufacturers Hanover Trust. In 1989, Manufacturers Hanover Trust sold 60% of CIT to Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank of Japan.In 1991, the company acquired Fidelcor Business Credit Corporation, which increased its services to small businesses. In 1992, CIT opened 15 new offices in 7 states.In 1997, the company became a public company via an initial public offering that raised $850 million.NEWS,weblink Best and Worst, SCOTT, REEVES, Barron's (newspaper), Barron's, December 15, 1997, subscription, On November 15, 1999, CIT acquired Toronto-based Newcourt Credit Group in a $4.2 billion transaction, which created one of the largest publicly owned leasing companies.NEWS,weblink CIT to Acquire Newcourt Credit In Stock Deal for $4.12 Billion, Larry M., Greenberg, Gregory, Zuckerman, The Wall Street Journal, March 9, 1999, limited, NEWS,weblink Credit gambit: CIT Group Inc. agreed to acquire Newcourt, Chicago Tribune, March 8, 1999, limited,Early 2000s
In 2001, Tyco acquired CIT for $9.2 billion in stock.NEWS,weblink Tyco buying CIT for $9.2B, CNN, March 13, 2001, NEWS,weblink Tyco International to Acquire CIT Group for $9.2 Billion, Nikhil, Deogun, Steven, Lipin, Mark, Maremont, The Wall Street Journal, March 13, 2001, limited, NEWS,weblink Tyco set to acquire finance company CIT, Spencer, Chin, EE Times, March 13, 2001, CIT was renamed as Tyco Capital.NEWS,weblink Tyco calls its plans to split up "a mistake', Tampa Bay Times, September 3, 2005, limited, Tyco ran into operating troubles and sold or spun off non-core operations, including CIT. On July 8, 2002, Tyco completed its divestment of its Tyco Capital business through an initial public offering, via the sale of 100% of the common shares in CIT Group Inc.NEWS,weblink Tyco raises $4.6-billion in CIT spinoff, Bloomberg News, The Globe and Mail, July 2, 2002, NEWS,weblink Tyco Posts $2.32 Billion Loss, Cites Downturn, CIT Spinoff, Mark, Maremont, The Wall Street Journal, July 24, 2002, subscription, In 2004, the company acquired the technology-leasing unit of GATX for about $200 million in cash.NEWS,weblink COMPANY NEWS; CIT TO BUY LEASING UNIT FROM GATX FOR ABOUT $200 MILLION, Bloomberg News, The New York Times, April 16, 2004, limited, In 2006, CIT moved its global headquarters back to New York City, opening a new headquarters at 11 West 42nd Street, across from the New York Public Library.PRESS RELEASE,weblink CIT Opens New Global Headquarters in New York City, PR Newswire, April 27, 2006, Under the leadership of CEO Jeff Peek, assets at CIT rose 77% from 2004 to the end of 2007 as it acquired companies in education lending and subprime mortgages. Those acquisitions turned out to be disastrous for the company and in the following eight quarters, CIT reported more than $3 billion in losses.NEWS,weblink A Lender Gets Caught in the Currents, Julie, Creswell, The New York Times, May 4, 2008, limited,Bankruptcy and reorganization
On July 1, 2008, the company announced the sale of its home lending division to Lone Star Funds for $1.5 billion in cash and the assumption of $4.4 billion in debt and the sale of its manufactured housing loan portfolio, with a face value of $470 million in loans, to Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance for approximately $300 million.NEWS,weblink CIT Sells Home Loan Business to Lone Star, The New York Times, July 1, 2008, NEWS,weblink CIT to shed $10 billion mortgage assets, Elinor, Comlay, Reuters, July 1, 2008,2016 to present
In March 2016, CEO John Thain retired and was succeeded by Ellen Alemany, a member of the board of directors.NEWS,weblink John Thain to Retire as CIT CEO, Rachel Louise, Ensign, Peter, Rudegeair, The Wall Street Journal, October 21, 2015, limited, WEB, John Thain of CIT Group Will Step Down as Chief Executive,weblink The New York Times, October 22, 2015, limited, In April 2017, the company sold its aircraft lease business to Avolon for $10.38 billion.PRESS RELEASE,weblink Avolon Completes US$10.38 Billion Acquisition of CIT Group Aircraft Leasing Business, Business Wire, April 4, 2017, NEWS, How Ellen Alemany is reinventing CIT,weblink Kristin, Broughton, American Banker, September 26, 2017, In October 2017, the company sold Financial Freedom, acquired as part of the acquisition of OneWest Bank, and its reverse mortgage portfolio.PRESS RELEASE,weblink CIT Reaches Agreement to Sell Financial Freedom and Reverse Mortgage Portfolio, PR Newswire, October 6, 2017, In October 2018, the company sold its European rail leasing business, NACCO, which was its last overseas operation.WEB, CIT Completes Sale of its European Rail Business,weblink PR Newswire, October 5, 2018, In January 2020, CIT acquired Mutual of Omaha Bank.WEB,weblink CIT buys Mutual of Omaha Bank for $1 billion, HousingWire, January 2, 2020, PRESS RELEASE,weblink CIT Completes Acquisition of Mutual of Omaha Bank, PR Newswire, January 2, 2020, In January 2022, CIT was acquired by First Citizens BancShares.PRESS RELEASE,weblink First Citizens Completes Merger With CIT Group, PR Newswire, January 4, 2022,References
{{Reflist}}External links
- {{Official website|cit.com}}
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- "CIT Group" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
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