By John D. Stoll 

Once upon a time, many ribbed General Motors Co. for being a loan maker that happened to build cars. When times got tough, the company dropped its mortgage and auto finance business and the jokes ended.

Nearly a decade later, an ambitious plan to stage a comeback as a lender has serious implications for the company's broader financial targets. The four-year-old GM Financial--a fully-owned subsidiary formed through the $3.5 billion acquisition of Texas-based subprime auto lender AmeriCredit Corp.--has lofty expansion plans this year, and executives expect to start raking in bigger profits by 2016, just in time to help GM Chief Executive Mary Barra apply those earnings to her margin goals.

GM reports earnings on Wednesday, and Chief Financial Officer Chuck Stevens will likely reiterate a lackluster profit outlook for GM Financial this year. Last month, he told investors GM Financial is in "growth mode" and expansion-related costs mean earnings will be "flattish" against 2014.

Known as a captive lending arm, GM Financial is poised to finance a substantially bigger portion of GM vehicles in 2015, a period of sales growth.

However, GM Financial still needs to invest in systems and hire more people, and this will weigh on near-term earnings.

GM Financial made $684 million before interest and taxes through September, on par with 2013. GM Financial's profit represents 17% of GM's entire operating profit through three quarters, while Ford Credit makes up 27% of Ford Motor Co.'s mix.

For the time being, the credit arm likely has negligible opportunity to turbocharge GM shares, which have been stuck in neutral during Ms. Barra's tenure.

But Mr. Stevens has said GM Financial should deliver bigger returns in "2016 and beyond." In order to get there, the unit needs a higher mix of unsecured debt and to stay aggressive in ripping business from Ally Financial, the successor company to the GMAC lending arm controlled by GM until 2006.

Ally has for several years provided a disproportionate mix of the loans and leases for GM's global car and truck sales. But, as GM Financial expanded lending to new international markets and became more capable of lending to a wider swath of buyers, originations are shifting from Ally to GM's in-house lender.

In a January interview with Automotive News, a trade publication, GM Financial COO Kyle Birch said the unit in November and December wrote more leases for GM than Ally on a percentage basis for the first time.

On Tuesday, GM Financial will tighten its grip on GM's U.S. leasing business, which represents a substantial portion of total sales.

Lease deals on Buick and GMC vehicles, priced below market due to subsidies given by GM, will be exclusively offered through GM Financial, leaving Ally and others out in the cold.

Analysts generally applaud GM Financial's growth plan. The industry has long seen captive finance arms as strategic assets, helping fund dealers as they stock inventories, and shoppers looking for deals. The hefty profit these units can reap helps offset weakness in automotive operations that can crop up all over the globe.

Ally Chief Executive Michael Carpenter, however, said GM's plan to invest big in GM Financial is risky.

"These captives all have very high cost of capital," Mr. Carpenter said in an interview last week. "They don't have the leverage available to the bank."

When it comes to selling vehicles, Mr. Carpenter said "a well-managed set of relationships between the OEM [original equipment manager] and independent financiers is likely to sell more vehicles." He suggested the race to build GM Financial may show too much focus on earnings, too little focus on use of capital.

Julie Steinberg contributed to this article. The Week Ahead looks at coming corporate events.

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