Ally Financial Inc.

ALLY
Financial Analysis · Updated May 28, 2026 · Coverage 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
5.9%
FY2025 · ROTCE: Net Income to common / avg tangible common equity · WACC ~11.5% · Moat spread +-5.6pp
Diluted Shares
307M
Q1 2026

Business Overview


ticker: ALLY step: 01 title: Business Model source: coverage-next-full generated: 2026-05-28

Step 01 — Business Model

Section 1 — One-Line Description

Ally Financial is a digital-only U.S. bank that uses its $152B retail-deposit franchise to fund the largest independent (non-captive) U.S. auto-finance platform, an insurance F&I products business, and a middle-market commercial finance lender — earning a spread between deposit cost and loan/lease yields, plus fee income from insurance and corporate-finance activities [S1].

Section 2 — How Ally Makes Money

ALLY runs three reportable franchises after the 2025 simplification:

A. Dealer Financial Services (≈80% of pretax earnings)

This is split into two sub-businesses with deeply intertwined economics:

1. Automotive Finance [S1] [S2]

  • Originates retail auto loans + leases through ~22,000+ U.S. franchise dealers
  • Mix: ~66% used cars / ~34% new (Q1 2026); origination credit-tier mix ~42% highest-quality "S-tier" + ~80% prime+
  • Originations cadence: $10–11.5B/quarter (~$42-45B annualized)
  • Receivables on balance sheet: ~$84B retail auto loans + ~$8B operating leases
  • Yields: ~8–9% on new originations; weighted-average book yield ~7.5%

2. Insurance [S1]

  • Vehicle service contracts (VSCs) and dealer F&I products
  • Underwrites insurance + earns commissions on third-party products distributed through the dealer channel
  • Counter-cyclical to auto: holds a securities investment portfolio that benefits from rate volatility
  • Float economics similar to small P&C insurer
B. Corporate Finance (≈10–12% of pretax earnings) [S1]
  • Middle-market secured lending to private-equity-sponsored borrowers
  • Asset-based finance + senior secured / mezzanine loans
  • Book size: ~$10B receivables
  • Returns: high ROEs (mid-20%s) when credit performs
C. Corporate & Other (residual; deposit franchise + run-off + Ally Invest) [S1]
  • Ally Bank deposit operations ($151.6B retail deposits): the funding engine. Operating cost of digital deposits is much lower than branch-based banks (no real-estate, lower headcount per dollar of deposits) — structural cost advantage.
  • Consumer mortgage portfolio (run-off): legacy book in run-down
  • Ally Invest: small retail brokerage (commission-free trading) — strategic deposit-gathering tool, not profit center

Section 3 — Customer Segments

Segment Count Notes
Auto dealer relationships 22,000+ franchise dealers Multi-brand, mostly franchised new-car stores
Auto borrowers (HFI book) ~5M+ active loans Prime/super-prime skew
Ally Bank depositors ~3.7M relationships Avg balance ~$40K; sticky digital deposits
Corp Finance borrowers ~200 PE-sponsored middle-market companies
Insurance dealer clients 8,000+ dealers using VSC products F&I revenue per vehicle

Section 4 — Value Chain Map

Capital Sources             →  Asset Origination          →  Capital Markets             →  Servicing/Revenue
─────────────────────          ─────────────────────         ─────────────────────         ─────────────────────
Retail digital deposits         Dealer-channel auto loans     Securitization (AART)         Loan portfolio interest
($152B; ~93% retail,            Operating leases              Whole-loan sales (limited)    Lease residuals
 100% FDIC-insured)             Corporate Finance loans       FHLB advances                 F&I commissions (Insurance)
Long-term unsec. debt ($17B)    Insurance products            Senior unsecured              Investment income (Insurance float)
FHLB / capital markets          Mortgages (run-off)                                         Deposit servicing

Where value is captured:

  • Spread (NIM) on the auto/CorpFin book funded by lower-cost retail deposits = the dominant economic engine.
  • Fee income from Insurance (vehicle service contracts), Ally Invest (asset-management), and Corporate Finance arrangement/syndication fees.
  • Operating leverage: 25M-customer digital platform with low marginal cost = scales without branch CapEx.

Section 5 — Unit Economics Sketch

For a single auto loan ($30K average balance, 70-month term):

Line Per-Loan ($) %
Loan yield (gross interest) $2,250 7.5%
Cost of funds (deposits) -$1,140 -3.8%
Net interest margin $1,110 3.7%
Provision for credit losses -$405 -1.35%
Risk-adjusted margin $705 2.35%
Operating costs allocated -$300 -1.0%
Pretax contribution $405 1.35%
Tax (~24%) -$97 -0.32%
After-tax ROA on loan $308 1.03%

Note: Approximate; actual loss assumption varies by tier and vintage. The 1.0%+ ROA on the auto book is competitive (industry-leading for independent non-captives).

Section 6 — Why This Model Works

  1. Funding moat: A digital-only retail deposit base of $152B is the lowest-cost stable funding ALLY can access, materially cheaper than capital markets. Branch-based competitors (JPM, USB) have higher operating costs to maintain deposits.
  2. Scale in independent auto: ALLY is the only non-captive bank-owned lender with national 22,000-dealer reach. Switching costs for dealers are real (operational integration of credit decisions + funding).
  3. Diversified spread businesses: Auto + CorpFin + Insurance all share the deposit base; cross-subsidization in adverse cycles (Insurance float income offsets weak auto NIM, etc.).
  4. Capital generation engine: Even at trough EPS of $1.80 (2024), ALLY generated ~$0.5B excess capital after dividend. At normalized $4.50+ EPS, $1B+ in annual capital return capacity.

Section 7 — Why This Model Has Risks

  1. Auto credit cycle exposure: ~85% of risk-weighted assets are auto-related. Cyclical sensitivity to U.S. consumer credit + used-vehicle pricing.
  2. AOCI volatility: AFS investment portfolio (~$30B securities) marks-to-market through OCI — rate spikes hit tangible equity.
  3. Deposit beta: Digital deposits can move faster than branch deposits if competitors raise rates. ALLY has shown deposit beta in line with peers (~50-60% through the 2022-2023 cycle).
  4. GM legacy exposure: Lost GM subvention business in 2015; still has GM-related dealer concentration risk.
  5. Regulatory: Top-50 bank → CCAR, DFAST, CFPB, FDIC oversight; capital actions require Fed approval.

Section 8 — Conclusions

ALLY is a digital deposit-funded specialty bank with a credit-cycle-sensitive asset side. Its economic engine is straightforward — earn NIM on auto + corp loans, supplemented by insurance fees. The 2025 strategic simplification (credit card divestiture, Ally Lending wind-down) sharpens the franchise: post-2025 ALLY is purer-play auto + bank.

The business is mid-cycle — auto credit normalizing, NIM expanding, capital being rebuilt. Forward earnings trajectory rests on (1) NIM expansion (highly likely; mechanical), (2) credit normalization (in progress; tracking expectations), and (3) capital-return restart (probable in 2H 2026).

Source Index

[S1] 10-K FY2025 (filed 2026-02-25, accession 0000040729-26-000005) [S2] Q1 2026 8-K + investor presentation [S3] Industry composites + ALLY 10-K segment disclosure

Financial Snapshot


ticker: ALLY step: 04 title: Financial Quality (incl. Adversarial Sweep) source: coverage-next-full generated: 2026-05-28

Step 04 — Financial Quality

Section 1 — Statement Quality Assessment

Revenue Recognition
  • Net Interest Income: Recognized accrual-basis on loan and investment portfolios. ALLY follows standard GAAP for banks (Topic 326 / CECL). No unusual revenue-recognition complexity [S1].
  • Insurance premiums: Recognized over the contract period (VSC contracts) — multi-year amortization. Conservative approach.
  • Securitization gains/losses: ALLY uses sale-of-financial-assets treatment for off-balance sheet securitizations; recognizes gain at securitization in some cases. Minimal in recent years.
Provision for Credit Losses (CECL)
  • ALLY adopted CECL effective Jan 1, 2020, which led to one-time $1.2B day-1 reserve build. Since then, ACL has been managed dynamically based on portfolio composition + macroeconomic forecast.
  • 2025 ACL: $3.49B vs. $3.71B FY2024 (modest release as credit normalizes)
  • Methodology: Discounted cash flow with quarterly reasonable & supportable forecast; uses Moody's economic forecasts as primary input
  • Critical accounting estimate: Reserve methodology is heavily dependent on used-vehicle pricing forecast (Manheim) — sensitivity disclosed in 10-K Item 7A
Operating Leases
  • ALLY runs an ~$8B operating lease portfolio (vehicles leased to consumers via dealers)
  • Residual value assumptions are critical — currently positioned conservatively post-2022 used-car spike
  • Reset of residuals each year flows through depreciation/G&A; not "earnings management" risk
Tax Accounting
  • ALLY's effective tax rate has been unusually low (~15-20%) in recent years due to:
    • Energy tax credits (Insurance subsidiary investment in renewables)
    • State tax planning + capital-loss carryforwards
  • This is sustainable but adds optionality — a normalized 22-24% effective rate would compress EPS by ~10%

Section 2 — Quality Adjustments

Adjustment Direction Magnitude Reasoning
Add back: 2025 credit-card divestiture costs + EPS ~$0.50 One-time strategic action
Subtract: Insurance investment gains (volatile) - EPS ~$0.30 trailing Smooth for trend
Tax-rate normalization - EPS ~$0.25 Move ETR from 15% → 22%
AOCI marks (mark-to-market vol) Equity adj $1-2B Smoothed over the cycle, but currently a drag

Adjusted FY2025 EPS ≈ $2.30-2.50 (close to reported $2.37). Reported earnings are not materially polished — quality of earnings is HIGH.

Section 3 — Adversarial Research Sweep (Mandatory)

Short Reports
  • No prominent short-seller reports on ALLY in recent years
  • ALLY's short interest is typically ~3-5% of float (modest — not a heavily-shorted name)
  • Brief sell-side bear notes have focused on (1) auto credit risk and (2) AOCI volatility, but no fraud-related allegations
SEC Investigations / Enforcement Actions
  • No active SEC enforcement actions disclosed in FY2025 10-K Item 3 (Legal Proceedings) [S1]
  • Historical: 2013 LIBOR-related settlement (pre-Ally branding era); legacy GMAC subprime mortgage settlements (2014); all resolved
Material Lawsuits
  • GAP waiver class action (auto F&I product) — settled in prior years
  • Discriminatory pricing lawsuits related to dealer markups — settled with CFPB/DOJ in 2013 ($98M); compliance regime well-established since
  • Standard putative class actions on terms and disclosures — no individually material exposures disclosed
  • 10-K Item 3 quantifies aggregate exposure as "not material" in management's view
Restatement History
  • No financial-statement restatements in the last 7+ years
  • ALLY's auditor (Deloitte & Touche LLP since 2009) has issued clean opinions consistently
  • Internal control over financial reporting (ICFR) deemed effective in every annual filing
Auditor & Audit Committee Issues
  • Deloitte & Touche has been ALLY's auditor since 2009; long tenure but not a flag for a bank-holding-co (continuity valued by Fed)
  • No reported critical audit matters (CAMs) suggesting accounting risk
  • Audit Committee composed of independent directors with relevant financial expertise
Whistleblower / Insider Issues
  • No disclosed whistleblower complaints affecting financial reporting
  • Recent insider activity is buying-direction (CEO + CFO purchases Jan 2026) — opposite of distress signal
Regulatory Investigations
  • Active: standard CFPB exam cycle (auto-finance practices)
  • No Fed CCAR objections in recent cycles
  • No FDIC enforcement actions on Ally Bank
  • 2024 CFPB rulemaking around F&I products — ALLY has navigated without material impact
Adverse Media
  • 2024-2025 media focused on auto credit cycle (legitimate cyclical risk; not malfeasance)
  • 2026 media on subprime auto delinquency record (industry-level, not ALLY-specific)
  • 2025 media on credit-card divestiture (positioned as strategic simplification, not capital pressure)
Forensic Accounting Red Flags (DuPont / Beneish-style)
Metric ALLY FY2025 Flag?
Days sales outstanding change N/A (bank)
Days payable outstanding change N/A (bank)
Gross margin trend NIM rising (3.48% Q1 2026 vs 3.30% Q1 2025) OK
Effective tax rate trend 15-20% (low but explained) OK
Working capital churn N/A (bank)
Goodwill / intangibles change Stable ~$0.1B (very small) OK
Asset growth vs. equity growth Assets +2.2% / Equity +11.5% (FY25) OK (capital build)
Off-balance-sheet exposure trend AART securitizations stable OK

No forensic red flags identified.

Section 4 — Conservative Accounting Indicators

Indicator Status Notes
Reserve coverage (ACL/loans) 2.7% High; conservative for prime book
Operating lease residuals Conservative since 2022 reset Demonstrated by lease income stability
Goodwill amortization / impairment history No write-downs Clean intangibles
Tax-rate consistency Low but stable Explained by tax credits, not aggressive planning
Off-balance-sheet (securitization) Modest, well-disclosed AART trusts disclosed quarterly

Section 5 — Earnings Quality Snapshot

  • GAAP EPS FY2025: $2.37
  • Adjusted Pre-Tax Pre-Provision (PPNR) FY2025: $2.52B → ~$8.05 per share pretax-pre-provision EPS
  • Provision normalization (NCO ~ $1.7B annual run-rate) ≈ $5.50 EPS underlying earnings power
  • Tax-rate normalization (to 22-24%) shaves ~10%
  • Normalized through-cycle EPS estimate: $5.00–5.50 per share

Current $2.37 EPS reflects (a) elevated credit costs working through, (b) credit-card divestiture friction, (c) AOCI drag on tangible equity. As these normalize, true earnings power is ~$5+ per share, supporting the consensus $4.50-5.00 FY2026E.

Section 6 — Cash vs. Reported Earnings Reconciliation

For banks, OCF is dominated by loan book + investment-portfolio swings — less informative than for industrials. The cleaner test:

Metric FY2025
Net Income $852M
+ Provision for credit losses $1.20B (net; gross NCO $1.72B less reserve release)
- Net Charge-Offs -$1.72B
+ Other non-cash items + $0.5B (depreciation, SBC, etc.)
Pre-Working-Capital Operating CF ~$0.84B
OCF (XBRL) $3.73B

The OCF >> Net Income gap is from balance-sheet working-capital swings (deposit growth, loan paydowns). For valuation, use earnings × multiple, not DCF on OCF.

Section 7 — One-Time Charges & Items

FY2024-2025 Notable
  • Credit-card divestiture: ~$0.30B in transaction costs + transition-related charges in 2025
  • Ally Lending wind-down: Modest restructuring costs in 2024-2025
  • AOCI cumulative: -$1.5B mark on AFS securities still working off
Pre-2024
  • CECL day-1 reserve build ($1.2B in Q1 2020) — long resolved
  • COVID provision spike (FY2020 $1.44B) — long resolved
  • Originating-IPO costs (2014 GMAC → ALLY transition) — long resolved

Section 8 — Conclusions

ALLY's financial reporting quality is HIGH. No restatements, no SEC enforcement, no short-seller reports, no auditor concerns, no forensic red flags. The accounting is straightforward bank-CECL with no unusual revenue-recognition or off-balance-sheet complexity beyond standard securitization.

Quality scores:

  • Accounting conservatism: HIGH (CECL reserves above peer average; conservative lease residuals)
  • Disclosure quality: HIGH (excellent MD&A and segment reporting; clear capital-action communication)
  • Earnings power vs. reported: Reported EPS UNDERSTATES through-cycle earnings power by ~50% (cyclical trough)

Things to verify in /complete-coverage:

  • Item 7A (quantitative + qualitative market risk) for NIM sensitivity
  • Note on CECL methodology for forward-loss assumption
  • Capital plan disclosure (CCAR submission expected in 2026)

Source Index

[S1] 10-K FY2025 (Items 3, 7, 7A, 8) — accession 0000040729-26-000005 [S2] Q1 2026 10-Q + 8-K [S3] CFPB / DOJ enforcement actions database (historical; current clean) [S4] DEF 14A 2026 (auditor disclosure)

Deeper Financial Analysis

The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $ALLY.

Revenue Breakdown
Segment revenue, geographic mix, product-line contribution margins, and cohort dynamics.
Financial Trends
Quarter-over-quarter momentum, leading indicators, and inflection point analysis.
Balance Sheet
Debt structure, liquidity runway, dilution risk, and working capital dynamics.
Capital Allocation
Buyback cadence, M&A appetite, dividend policy, and reinvestment priorities.
Returns on Capital (ROIC)
Multi-year ROIC vs. WACC, marginal returns on reinvestment, sales-to-invested-capital efficiency, and moat spread.
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