New Straits Times

‘Goldman Sachs runs out of steam, needs inspiratio­n’

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NEW YORK: A slump in Goldman Sachs’s long-dominant trading business has sharpened questions about the Wall Street kingpin’s strategy as technologi­cal change disrupts the finance industry.

“Goldman Sachs has run out of steam,” said Richard Bove, analyst at Vertical Research.

“It needs inspiratio­n. It needs new management, new businesses, new activities.”

Goldman’s travails are something of a surprise given its unparallel­ed prestige in American finance.

Long associated with the super rich and powerful, Goldman Sachs has been involved in complex and sometimes controvers­ial transactio­ns and dealings.

Its global alumni includes European Central Bank head Mario Draghi and several White House officials, including Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin and National Economic Council director Gary Cohn, who is attempting to shepherd a major tax reform bill through Washington.

Gregori Volokhine, president of Meeschaert Capital markets, said the 148-year-old firm “must be reinvented”.

Goldman reported an unpreceden­ted 40 per cent plunge in revenues for trading in fixed income, commoditie­s and currencies (FICC) in the second quarter, a performanc­e that lagged that of rivals JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley. FICC has long been a key profit centre at Goldman and helped launch the rise of top brass such as chief executive LLoyd Blankfein, president and co-chief operating officer Harvey Schwartz and chief financial officer Martin Chavez.

But since the 2008 financial crisis, the role of trading desks has eroded as powerful automated trading algorithms have gobbled up more transactio­ns and as more investors have embraced exchange traded funds which have lower costs.

So far, Goldman Sachs has argued that trading remains a viable business, which will pick up in times of market volatility. AFP

It needs inspiratio­n. It needs new management, new businesses, new activities.

Richard Bove

Analyst, Vertical Research

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