The Pak Banker

Goldman Sachs profit jumps 28pc on investment banking strength

- NEW YORK

Goldman Sachs' profit rose 28% in the first quarter, buoyed by a recovery in underwriti­ng and dealmaking that boosted its investment banking unit, it reported on Monday.

Profit rose to $4.13 billion, or $11.58 per share, for the three months ended March 31, compared with $3.23 billion, or $8.79 per share, a year ago.

"We continue to execute on our strategy, focusing on our core strengths to serve our clients and deliver for our shareholde­rs," CEO David Solomon said.

Executives at rivals JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup cited improving conditions for dealmaking on Friday when the lenders reported profits that beat market expectatio­ns.

Shares rose 3.4% before the bell. They have climbed about 1% so far this year compared with a nearly 8% drop for rival Morgan Stanley.

As a leading advisor for mergers and acquisitio­ns, Goldman has advised on some of last year's biggest deals, including Exxon Mobil's $60 billion purchase of Pioneer Natural Resources.

The Federal Reserve has so far managed to steer the economy toward a so-called soft landing, in which it raises interest rates and tames inflation while avoiding a major downturn.

With corporatio­ns regaining some confidence to raise money in capital markets, equity and bond underwriti­ng business rebounded and corporate boards clinched more mergers and acquisitio­ns (M&A).

Global M&A volume climbed 30% in the first quarter to about $755.1 billion from a year ago, according to data from Dealogic.

Higher fees from underwriti­ng debt and stock offerings as well as advising on deals lifted Goldman's investment banking fees up 32% to $2.08 billion.

Revenue from trading in fixed income, currencies and commoditie­s (FICC) rose 10% to $4.32 billion, helped by record financing revenue. Equities revenue also jumped 10% to $3.31 billion.

The asset and wealth management division generated record quarterly management fees of $2.45 billion. Meanwhile, assets under supervisio­n rose to a record $2.85 trillion with wealth client assets at $1.5 trillion.

The bank had joined its asset management and wealth management arms as part of its reorganiza­tion in 2022.

Platform solutions, the unit that houses some of Goldman's consumer operations, garnered 24% higher revenue. Goldman is slimming down its ill-fated consumer banking operations after they lost billions of dollars. It has already taken big writedowns on GreenSky, a home improvemen­t lender it bought and sold two years later.

CEO Solomon, who once championed the retail push, has drawn criticism for the strategy.

Top proxy adviser Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services (ISS) urged shareholde­rs to vote for the bank to split its chairman and CEO roles, both of which are currently held by Solomon. ISS cited his "missteps and steep losses" in a report to investors.

Goldman has also scrapped its co-branded credit cards with General Motors, and a similar partnershi­p it has with tech giant Apple is facing an uncertain future.

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