Florida-based Gator Capital Management sold 83,850 shares of OneMain Financial in the third quarter.
The shares were worth an estimated $4.78 million.
The move marked an exit for Gator Capital, with the position previously representing about 1.48% of the fund’s AUM.
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Florida-based Gator Capital Management eliminated its position in OneMain Holdings (NYSE:OMF), reducing exposure by $4.78 million, according to a November 13 SEC filing.
Gator Capital Management disclosed in a November 13 SEC filing that it exited its entire holding in OneMain Holdings (NYSE:OMF), selling 83,850 shares. The transaction’s estimated value was $4.78 million based on quarterly average pricing.
The fund’s OneMain Holdings position represented 1.48% of AUM in the previous period — before the third-quarter sale.
Top holdings after the filing include:
NASDAQ: HOOD: $76.63 million (19.7% of AUM)
NYSE: HOUS: $27.15 million (7.0% of AUM)
NASDAQ: FCNCA: $16.99 million (4.4% of AUM)
NYSE: AX: $13.04 million (3.3% of AUM)
NASDAQ: UMBF: $12.03 million (3.1% of AUM)
As of Friday, shares of OneMain Holdings were priced at $69.08, up 30% over the past year and well outperforming the S&P 500, which is up about 15% in the same period.
Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Revenue (TTM) | $4.89 billion |
Net Income (TTM) | $705.00 million |
Dividend Yield | 6% |
Price (as of Friday) | $69.08 |
OneMain Holdings offers personal loans, credit cards, and insurance products through branch offices and an online platform.
The company generates revenue primarily from interest income on consumer lending, ancillary insurance products, and related service fees.
It serves non-prime and near-prime consumers across most U.S. states, focusing on individuals seeking personal financial solutions.
OneMain Holdings provides personal installment loans and related financial products to non-prime consumers in the United States. The company leverages an extensive branch network and digital channels to reach a broad customer base, emphasizing accessible credit solutions and cross-sold insurance offerings.
Over the past year, OneMain has delivered exactly what income-oriented shareholders might hope for: steady earnings, improving credit metrics, rising dividends, and aggressive buybacks. The stock’s roughly 30% climb reflects that execution, not hype. But portfolio management is more about trade-offs. In the third quarter, OneMain posted $1.67 in GAAP EPS (up from $1.31 one year prior), raised its dividend again to $1.05 per share, and authorized a fresh $1 billion buyback program. Managed receivables grew to nearly $26 billion while net charge-offs continued to trend lower — meaning that, operationally, the business looks solid.
The decision to exit appears more about concentration and redeployment than concern. OneMain had been a modest position, and trimming a lender after a strong run frees capital for higher-conviction ideas elsewhere in the portfolio. That is especially true when other top holdings skew toward growth and platform-driven businesses rather than consumer credit.

