Who bought one main financial?

Who bought one main financial?

Springleaf Holdings
Personal finance company Springleaf Holdings is buying Citigroup’s OneMain Financial for $4.25 billion. OneMain Financial Holdings of Baltimore provides personal loans and has more than 1,100 neighborhood branches across 43 states.

What type of company is one main financial?

Public
OneMain Financial

Type Public
Industry Financial services
Predecessor Springleaf Financial CitiFinancial American General Finance
Founded 1912 in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Founder Alexander E. Duncan

When did CitiFinancial become OneMain Financial?

2011
Baltimore, MD – CitiFinancial, the consumer lending arm of Citigroup, today revealed a new identity for its U.S. Full Service Network business. In the summer of 2011, the business will begin operating under the new name OneMain Financial.

Does OneMain Financial require proof of income?

Before you close your loan, OneMain will need you to provide the following documents: A copy of a valid, government-issued ID (e.g. driver’s license or passport) Proof of residence (e.g. a driver’s license with your current address, a utility bill, or a signed lease) Proof of income (e.g. pay stubs or tax returns)

Who took over CitiFinancial?

DALLAS – Santander Consumer USA (“Santander”), an affiliate of Banco Santander, has reached an agreement with Citi to purchase $3.2 billion of CitiFinancial Auto’s auto loan portfolio.

What happened to CitiFinancial?

CitiFinancial exited the servicing business in 2017. CFNA Receivables (TX), LLC or Citicorp Home Mortgage Services, Inc. are successors in interest to CitiFinancial Servicing and the below named companies through acquisitions, mergers or name changes and no longer has any security interest as lienholder.

Is CitiFinancial the same as OneMain financial?

Baltimore-based CitiFinancial, the consumer lending arm of financial giant Citigroup Inc., will be rebranded under a new name that sheds its corporate parent’s Wall Street identity to reflect more Main Street roots.