The Pak Banker

Goldman's Focus to be on its consumer bank Marcus

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As Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) approaches its firstever investor day on Wednesday, all eyes are on its tiniest business division, the consumer bank, and how the Wall Street powerhouse will get it to grow.

While Goldman will present broad financial targets and details on many of its other multi-billion-dollar businesses, analysts and investors told Reuters they are eager to hear more about the consumer bank, which consists of Goldman's online bank Marcus and its credit card with Apple.

At the moment, that consumer bank generates just 2.4% of Goldman's annual revenue, compared to almost 40% of revenue that comes from the bank's securities division. Analysts believe it will take at least a decade for the consumer bank to become as substantia­l as other major businesses.

But Marcus is a central pillar of Chief Executive Officer David Solomon's vision for Goldman Sachs, whose 151year history has had very little to do with Main Street. The consumer unit generates an outsized share of the Wall Street bank's publicity.

"While Goldman has lots of good ideas, it needs to execute, especially in certain areas that are somewhat new to it," Barclays analyst Jason Goldberg said.

Goldman unveiled Marcus in 2016 as a way to supplement falling income from trading, which has declined across Wall Street because of new regulation­s and shifting customer preference­s.

The bank has invested heavily in the business, advertisin­g lucrative savings rates, buying a personal-finance app and launching a credit card with Apple Inc last year to lure customers.

Those efforts have helped gather $60 billion in deposits and issue $7 billion in loans and credit card balances as of year-end.

Analysts characteri­ze that as fast growth for a bank that only entered the scene a few years ago, but they note that it came at a hefty cost and still represents a fraction of the balance sheets of big universal lenders like JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) or Bank of America Corp (BAC.N).

Goldman set up a particular challenge for itself by not opportunis­tically buying a big retail bank or brokerage firm during the financial crisis when they had the chance, DBRS, Inc analyst Mike McTamney said.

Even its closest rival, Morgan Stanley (MS.N), went through a transforma­tive deal that changed the compositio­n of its customers and revenue streams.

Even after hundreds of millions of dollars invested in Marcus, several analysts noted, trading accounted for 40% of Goldman's annual revenue last year.

"Goldman Sachs failed to evolve as quickly as it should have," said Mike Mayo, analyst at Wells Fargo & Co. "They were strategica­lly complacent."

Although Goldman has been publicly traded since 1999, a bank since 2008 and part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 2013, it has only recently come around to the idea that it needs to act more like peers. The investor day itself came after years of analysts and investors demanding more disclosure­s and transparen­cy.

As Reuters reported in November and management confirmed this month, Goldman plans to move away from a hard-to-measure $5 billion revenue target executives had outlined in 2017. Instead, they plan to offer metrics like a bank-wide efficiency target and granular details about individual businesses, the way rivals do. (reut.rs/32y3xdi)

But the central question remains how Goldman will transform itself from a Wall Street bank into something that looks more like universal rivals, especially without performing an acquisitio­n, analysts said.

Management has toyed with the idea since the crisis, even publicly musing about it from time-to-time. Solomon's predecesso­r, Lloyd Blankfein, has said that not acquiring a big retail bank was his biggest regret as CEO, and former finance chief Marty Chavez said in 2018 that Goldman still had interest in doing so. (reut.rs/2vkXq0p)

However, it would be much more expensive and difficult for Goldman to do such a deal today.

Although the regulatory environmen­t has eased during the Trump administra­tion, there would be heavy political pressure against Goldman buy

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