Finance

Goldman Sachs to post $400 million hit to third-quarter results as it unwinds consumer business

Products You May Like

In this article

  • GS
David Solomon, CEO of Goldman Sachs, during an interview for an episode of “The David Rubenstein Show: Peer-to-Peer Conversations” in New York on Aug. 6, 2024.
Jeenah Moon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Goldman Sachs will post a roughly $400 million pretax hit to third-quarter results as the bank continues to unwind its ill-fated consumer business.

CEO David Solomon said Monday at a conference that by unloading Goldman’s GM Card business, as well as a separate portfolio of loans, the bank would post a hit to revenues when it reports results next month.

It is the latest turbulence related to Solomon’s push into consumer retail. In late 2022, Goldman began to pivot away from its nascent consumer operations, beginning a series of write-downs related to selling chunks of the business. Goldman’s credit card business, in particular its Apple Card, allowed rapid growth in retail lending, but also led to losses and friction with regulators.

Goldman is instead focusing on asset and wealth management to help drive growth. The bank was in talks to sell the GM Card platform to Barclays, The Wall Street Journal reported in April.

Solomon also said Monday that trading revenue for the quarter was headed for a 10% decline because of a tough year-over-year comparison and difficult trading conditions in August for fixed-income markets.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

  • Top Dow stocks in August and where analysts see them going next
  • Tom Lee, who’s been correctly bullish, turns cautious and sees 7%-10% pullback
  • These stocks typically have the best and worst Septembers
  • Goldman tells clients to go for gold, likes metal amid geopolitical risk, rate cuts

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

From tariffs to DOGE, what companies are saying about the impact of MAGA policies
Op-ed: Amid DEI retreat, America’s small businesses are not caving like big corporations
Cruise stocks tumble after Commerce Secretary Lutnick signals tax crackdown
Once high-flying Bluebird Bio sells itself to private equity after tough times for the gene therapy maker
Home price growth has slowed. But high costs, economic worries have some buyers retreating