Western Alliance Bancorporation took a $126.4 million charge-off on Friday after Jefferies Financial Group told the bank it would not make the remaining payments owed under a forbearance agreement. The news sent WAL stock down roughly 12% in premarket trading.
Western Alliance Bancorporation, WAL
The charge-off is tied to a commercial loan collateralized by accounts receivable from First Brands Group, an auto parts supplier that filed for bankruptcy in September 2025, listing $11.6 billion in liabilities.
Western Alliance filed a complaint Friday in the New York Supreme Court against Jefferies, its Leucadia Asset Management (LAM) arm, and affiliated entities. The bank alleges breach of contract and fraud.
The situation traces back to October 2025, when Western Alliance entered a forbearance agreement after discovering that LAM’s servicer had allowed UCC financing statements to lapse on the receivables — a failure that triggered loan defaults.
Under that agreement, Jefferies was to complete full prepayment of the loan by March 31, 2026. The last payment Western Alliance received was $42.125 million on January 15, 2026.
Then came the blow. Jefferies recently informed Western Alliance it would not receive the final two principal payments due in Q1 2026, totaling $126.4 million.
Western Alliance’s CEO Kenneth Vecchione outlined a plan to offset the damage. The bank aims to realize $50 million in securities sale gains — of which roughly $45 million have already been booked quarter-to-date — and cut $50 million in operating expenses.
That gets them to $100 million in offsets. The remaining $26 million gap still needs a solution, and Vecchione said the bank is “evaluating other pathways.”
J.P. Morgan analyst Anthony Elian said it will be key that Western Alliance’s earnings trajectory beyond Q1 has “very minimal impact” from the charge-off.
Despite the charge-off, Western Alliance says its CET1 ratio would decline by only 7 basis points from its year-end 2025 level of 11.0%. The bank still projects a profitable Q1 with stable capital.
As of March 5, 2026, the bank reported 75% of total deposits as insured or collateralized, $21.5 billion in unencumbered high-quality liquid assets, and $20 billion in off-balance sheet borrowing capacity.
Western Alliance said it continues to project a profitable quarter despite the hit.
The post Western Alliance (WAL) Stock Plunges 12% After Jefferies Refuses to Pay $126M appeared first on CoinCentral.


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