Western Alliance Bancorporation disclosed a significant $126.4 million charge-off on Friday following notification from Jefferies Financial Group that it would cease making payments required under an existing forbearance arrangement. The announcement triggered a steep premarket decline of approximately 12% in WAL shares.
Western Alliance Bancorporation, WAL
The substantial write-down stems from a commercial financing facility backed by receivables from First Brands Group, an automotive components distributor that sought bankruptcy protection in September 2025 after accumulating $11.6 billion in outstanding obligations.
On Friday, Western Alliance initiated legal proceedings in New York Supreme Court naming Jefferies, its Leucadia Asset Management (LAM) division, and related corporate entities as defendants. The complaint centers on allegations of contractual violations and fraudulent conduct.
The origins of this dispute date to October 2025, when Western Alliance negotiated a forbearance arrangement after uncovering that LAM’s servicing agent had permitted UCC financing statements protecting the receivables collateral to expire — a critical oversight that constituted a default event.
The forbearance terms required Jefferies to execute complete loan repayment no later than March 31, 2026. Western Alliance’s most recent payment receipt was $42.125 million delivered on January 15, 2026.
Then the relationship collapsed. Jefferies recently notified Western Alliance that the final two principal installments scheduled for Q1 2026, representing $126.4 million, would not be forthcoming.
Chief Executive Kenneth Vecchione of Western Alliance detailed a mitigation strategy for the financial impact. The institution intends to generate $50 million through strategic securities portfolio sales — approximately $45 million of which has been captured within the current quarter — while implementing $50 million in operational expense reductions.
These combined measures address $100 million of the shortfall. The outstanding $26 million deficit remains unresolved, though Vecchione indicated the bank is “evaluating other pathways” to close the gap.
J.P. Morgan analyst Anthony Elian emphasized the importance of ensuring Western Alliance’s earnings performance after Q1 experiences “very minimal impact” from this charge-off event.
Notwithstanding the charge-off, Western Alliance maintains its CET1 ratio would fall merely 7 basis points from the year-end 2025 measurement of 11.0%. Management continues to forecast Q1 profitability with stable capital levels.
As of March 5, 2026, the institution reported that 75% of aggregate deposits carry insurance or collateralization, $21.5 billion in unencumbered premium liquid assets, and $20 billion in available off-balance sheet funding capacity.
Western Alliance emphasized it remains on track to deliver profitable quarterly results notwithstanding the financial setback.
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