Finance: Goldman loses its edge

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by gwb-trading, Feb 6, 2023.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Finance: Goldman loses its edge
    https://theweek.com/business/1020647/finance-goldman-loses-its-edge

    Goldman Sachs this week slashed the pay of its CEO, David Solomon, sending a message that the high-profile chief is "just another member of the team," said John Foley in Reuters. The Wall Street bank's move to cut Solomon's pay by a third, to $25 million, makes sense at a time when, "like many of its peers, it is shrinking head count and bonuses." Yet where employees see solidarity, investors may see "instability." Solomon has "already conceded dropping the ball" on the bank's consumer-lending project, abandoned "mere months after raising its targets." Though presented as a display of unity, the move might also suggest that after four years at the top, the CEO and chairman is "losing the confidence of his board."

    Goldman once "reveled" in its reputation as what Rolling Stone called the "great vampire squid" that "relentlessly jammed its blood funnel into anything that smells like money," said The Economist. Over the past decade, though, it has lost its ruthless momentum and been "comprehensively outperformed" by its rival Morgan Stanley. Solomon has admitted trying to do "too much, too fast" with the foray into consumer lending that went "badly wrong"; provisions against bad loans may have accounted for more than 10 percent of Goldman's operating expenses last year. The CEO's "blunt" management style has precipitated "a series of high-profile departures" from a firm once known for the "lifetime" devotion of its employees. Goldman's stock now trades at book value, "implying that investors would do just as well to liquidate" the company.

    Solomon's defense is that he "always said he was playing the long game," said Paul J. Davies in Bloomberg. The hope was that diversifying beyond volatile trading gains would please Wall Street and boost its stock. The problem is that investors' desire for more stable earnings doesn't "mean they want Goldman to become a sprawling financial conglomerate," an entity that is "rarely valued highly." And Goldman still relies on "costly rainmakers and traders"; last year, the bank "recorded its highest ever end-of-year staffing bill" despite making a 14.5 percent cut in staff costs, "the most among peers."

    "Ask most people to name an investment bank and the reply is 'Goldman Sachs,'"said John Gapper in the Financial Times. For years, Goldman and Morgan Stanley were the Coke and Pepsi of the investment business. Quietly, though, Morgan Stanley "pulled the Pepsi trick on Goldman." Just as Pepsi diversified away from soda, so Morgan Stanley moved away from financial trading to wealth and investment management. That's where Goldman should be headed, too, said Bram Berkowitz in The Motley Fool. Goldman already has "$2.5 trillion of assets under management," and that's "nothing to sniff at." But this still "pales in comparison" with Morgan Stanley. Going after ordinary consumer loans and checking accounts was a "big blunder" that delivered nothing but "billions in losses." Now, embarrassingly, Morgan Stanley, once a perennial also-ran, is more highly valued by investors, and the once invincible Goldman is in the unfamiliar position of playing catch-up.
     
  2. Tavurth

    Tavurth

    US news is such an echo chamber. I can smell the "recession" news from here 14,761 km away.

    Can the US news not understand FED game theory? Or is it chosen to print in this hypnotic way?
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  3. I doubt Goldman has lost any edge at all.
     
    jys78 and murray t turtle like this.
  4. 777

    777

    GS has even been losing ground to Jefferies.
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  5. %%
    I'm reading the high points of; WHY I left Goldman, book by Greg Smith. Chapter 6 Hunting Elephants ,looks interesting........
    Of course, there are 2 sides to every story.:caution::caution:
     
  6. newwurldmn

    newwurldmn

    the same way the US is losing ground to Djibouti.