Truist culls some consumer loans, cites long-term strategy

- Key insight: Truist Financial is no longer originating marine and recreational vehicle loans, and it has significantly reduced originations in other books, including indirect auto lending.
- What’s at stake: The remix, which comes ahead of a CEO transition, is Truist’s latest effort to improve profitability and efficiency.
- Forward look: Observers will be watching to see what changes are in store under incoming CEO Mike Lyons, who takes over on Sept. 1.
Three months after setting higher profitability targets,
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During the second quarter, the $556 billion-asset bank stopped originating loans for marine and recreational vehicles and “significantly reduced originations in several other less strategic and less profitable consumer lending units,” including prime and non-prime indirect auto lending, Chief Financial Officer Mike Maguire said Friday during the bank’s quarterly earnings call.
The move comes ahead of
The switch marks the first time
“Over the last several quarters, we’ve been clear about the actions we’re taking to drive stronger returns, improve efficiency and allocate capital to the highest-value opportunities across the company,” Rogers said during his final earnings call as CEO. “We continue to make deliberate choices about where we grow, where we invest and how we optimize our balance sheet.”
On Friday,
The pullback in marine/RV lending and auto lending contributed to
The bank expects loan production in both marine/RV lending and indirect auto lending to decline by 40% compared with last year’s figures, Maguire noted on the call. The marine/RV portfolio totals about $4 billion, while auto lending is roughly $25 billion, he added.
“I would just say it’s a continuous search … to make sure we’re allocating capital in the absolute most efficient way. And by the way, it’s not entirely in consumer,” Maguire said. “There are things that we’ve done and we’ll continue to do in wholesale [lending], around client selection, around pricing, around product design, rebalancing, that are all intended to create more profitability and efficiency. … We’re going to make smart choices.”
According to Michael Rose, an analyst at Raymond Janes,
“While reiterating its commitment to achieving a 15% ROTCE in 2027 and 16%-18% longer term, we believe the path has become more challenging and expect investors to remain focused on both the timing of improvement and whether incoming CEO Mike Lyons ultimately modifies
Firmwide revenues were $5.27 billion, up about 5.6% from the same quarter in 2025. Average total loans grew about 6% year over year to around $332 billion, while average total deposits rose about 1% from the year-ago period to approximately $405 billion.
Net interest income totaled $3.6 billion for the quarter, rising less than 1% from the year-ago quarter. Fee income of $1.6 billion rose 17% year over year.
Noninterest expenses of $3 billion were up 2.3% year over year, due to higher personnel costs.
During Friday’s call, analysts prodded Rogers for insight into how Lyons may run the bank and what changes could be forthcoming. Rogers said Lyons, who after his stint at PNC briefly
“Mike came in here to lead and run a high-performing company. And I don’t think there’ll be any doubt about that, relative to the investments that need to be made in the journey and the place that we go, he’ll have the requisite flexibility to think about how to achieve efficiencies and how to invest,” Rogers said.