United Community Banks To Sell Equipment Finance BusinessUnited on Friday announced a definitive agreement to sell its equipment finance business, consisting of Navitas Credit Corp. and NLFC Reinsurance Corp., to funds managed by Wafra Inc. for $1.9 billion in cash.The transaction strengthens United’s focus on its core relationship banking franchise across the Southeast while boosting liquidity and capital levels.The sale price represents a 7% premium to the par value of Navitas’ loan portfolio. United expects the transaction to generate a one-time pre-tax earnings benefit of $109 million, increase tangible book value per share by about 3%, and add 145 basis points to its CET1 capital ratio.Lower Risk Profile, Stronger LiquidityUnited said the deal will significantly reduce risk within its loan portfolio. Navitas accounts for about 10% of total loans but represented roughly 50% of net charge-offs during the 12 months ended March 31, 2026.Following the sale, United expects to receive $1.9 billion in net cash proceeds, resulting in a pro forma loan-to-deposit ratio of 74%. The bank plans to initially invest excess liquidity in lower-risk securities with a weighted average yield of 4% to 4.5% and a duration of less than two years.United said it will evaluate several capital deployment options after the transaction closes, including organic growth, balance sheet optimization, share repurchases, and selective in-market acquisitions.Navitas’ management team and employees are expected to remain with the business after the sale. The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, subject to customary closing conditions.Earnings And Analyst OutlookThe next major catalyst for the stock arrives with the July 22, 2026 (estimated) earnings report.
Why Is United Community Banks Stock Gaining Friday? - United Community Banks (NYSE:UCB)
United Community Banks (UCB) stock rises after announcing a $1.9B cash sale of its equipment finance business. Read the details here.
United Community Banks sells equipment finance unit Navitas to Wafra for $1.9B, refocusing on Southeast relationship banking. The divestiture removes the riskiest loan segment—Navitas was 50% of charge-offs from 10% of loans—and frees $1.9B plus 145 bps capital ratio gains.








