National Post

New era begins at Goldman

Less risk, more stability looks like the future

- St Ga ephen ndel Bloomberg Stephen Gandel is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering equity markets.

The bankers are reinheriti­ng some of Wall Street’s most precious earth.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. announced on Monday that David Solomon would become sole president, edging out Harvey Schwartz, who is leaving the firm. The move all but ensures that Solomon will succeed Lloyd Blankfein as chief executive officer. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Blankfein would step down by the end of the year, though Blankfein offered little clarificat­ion. The Solomon elevation appears to be a move in that direction.

Blankfein’s departure, whenever that is, will culminate a period in which Goldman seemed unsure of what its future should be. Blankfein suggested at times that he would like the firm to be the Walmart of Wall Street, ambitiousl­y building up a staid consumer lending business. At other times, Goldman’s leaders pointed to Apple or Google. Blankfein never seemed willing to relinquish Goldman’s brash trading culture, which had paved his rise to power — he once famously stormed out of a management meeting because the firm was unwilling to make as big a bet as he liked — but has more recently led to some embarrassi­ng losses. At the height of the bitcoin frenzy last year, Blankfein said his firm wanted in even as other Wall Street leaders remained cautious about trading the cryptocurr­ency.

The promotion of Solomon indicates that Goldman is not only moving on from Blankfein but from his legacy as well. Blankfein took over Goldman in 2006, when the balance of power on Wall Street was shifting to traders.

That trading culture paid off in Blankfein’s first few years, and particular­ly during the financial crisis. But it also tarnished Goldman’s reputation and has been a dud recently. Regulation­s and shifts such as the rise of indexing have made Wall Street’s trading desks less profitable. Blankfein continued to pine for the old days. He has repeatedly said he would ramp up the firm’s risk- taking again if regulators would allow it.

Solomon, like Paulson before him, has spent much of his career as an investment banker. He ran investment banking at Bear Stearns, leaving well before that firm collapsed. Schwartz, the other logical candidate for CEO, came from commoditie­s trading, like Blankfein. ( Incidental­ly, so did President Donald Trump’s recently departed economic adviser Gary Cohn. The selection of Solomon suggests that Cohn might not have been the lock for Blankfein’s successor that everyone thought he was.

Solomon’s elevation resolves some of Goldman’s identity crisis. And it got the thumbs up from investors, who have become increasi ngly wary of Goldman’s continued embrace of risk. Shares of Goldman jumped almost $ 4 on the news on Monday, to nearly $ 275, before retreating somewhat. But it will also leave Solomon with plenty of tough decisions to make.

Goldman, with more t han 36,000 employees, has doubled in size since Paulson took over in 1999. It’s unclear whether a firm more f ocused on i nvestment banking can support as large a cost structure. Less trading and less risk may lead to more predictabl­e profits but also less opportunit­y for outsized gains and bonuses.

 ??  ?? David Solomon
David Solomon

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