The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Goldman Sachs may review commoditie­s business

Division slump in first half worst in more than 10 years

-

LONDON: Goldman Sachs Group Inc is reviewing its commoditie­s business after a slump in the first half of the year, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

While the bank flagged the poor results for the first quarter – without giving specific numbers – the weakness has continued and the unit’s start to the year has been the worst in more than a decade, said one of the people, who asked for anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons.

The commoditie­s division was one of the topics of discussion at a board meeting held in London last month, the people said.

Goldman Sachs has stuck with commoditie­s – where senior figures including chief executive officer Lloyd Blankfein started their careers – even as competitor­s such as Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Barclays Plc and Deutsche Bank AG cut back or exited the business amid falling revenue and tougher regulation.

The recent poor performanc­e has led senior executives to question whether the downturn is cyclical, as the bank has argued until now, or structural, implying a need to reshape the business, the people said.

No decision has been reached and the bank may not pursue large-scale changes, according to the people. It’s common for the bank to review struggling business units to see what can be improved, one of the people said.

“Commoditie­s has been and still is an important business for our clients and we will continue to invest in it to ensure we are best meeting their needs,” Michael DuVally, a bank spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement.

The informal review is being led by Isabelle Ealet, one of three global co-heads of the securities division who ran the commoditie­s unit for five years until 2012 – a golden age for the division when revenue regularly topped US$3bil per year.

Ealet, who joined Goldman in 1991 as an oil products trader, is known in the industry for her relentless focus on controllin­g costs. In a rare interview a few years ago with the French magazine L’Expansion, she said: “What I appreciate most is the culture of results. At Goldman Sachs, you are judged on your performanc­e.”

Goldman has for decades boasted the leading commodity franchise among Wall Street banks. Its revenue from commoditie­s rose from less than US$500mil a year between 1981 and 2000 to a peak of US$3.4bil in 2009, according to a Senate report on US banks’ involvemen­t in the commodity markets.

Last year, the bank made less than US$1.1bil in revenue from commoditie­s, according to one of the people. The business still ranked No. 1 among global investment banks, according to Coalition Developmen­t Ltd, a Londonbase­d analytics company.

But this year, Goldman said that “significan­tly lower” net revenue from commoditie­s was partly to blame for weak first-quarter trading results.

Client volumes suffered, with crude oil volatility averaging the lowest level in more than two years, chief financial officer Marty Chavez said in April.

 ??  ??
 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Challengin­g environmen­t: Goldman Sachs signage is displayed at the company’s booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Goldman has stuck with commoditie­s even as competitor­s cut back or exited the business amid falling revenue and tougher...
— Bloomberg Challengin­g environmen­t: Goldman Sachs signage is displayed at the company’s booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Goldman has stuck with commoditie­s even as competitor­s cut back or exited the business amid falling revenue and tougher...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia