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Goldman Sachs' Q2 profits plummet by 62% amidst sluggish merger activity

Goldman Sachs reported a 62% drop in Q2 profits, citing a decline in mergers and acquisitions and weakness in trading. Revenues fell 8% to $10.9bn.

Published on: Jul 19, 2023, 17:58:19 IST
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Goldman Sachs reported a steep drop in second-quarter profits Wednesday as it continued to struggle with an anaemic merger and acquisition market and weakness in trading.

The logo for Goldman Sachs is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City. (Reuters)
The logo for Goldman Sachs is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City. (Reuters)

Profits came in at $1.1 billion, down 62 per cent from the year-ago period. Revenues fell eight per cent to $10.9 billion.

The big investment bank, which has essentially abandoned a once-touted push to compete with retail banks for Main Street consumers, pointed to a "significant decline in industry-wide completed mergers and acquisitions transactions" as a drag on its critical global banking and markets division.

Revenues also tumbled in trades connected to fixed income, commodities and currencies; revenues were flat in equities trading.

Goldman also suffered a drop in its other main division, asset and wealth management, citing net losses and markdowns in real estate.

In a June interview on CNBC, Goldman Sachs Chief executive David Solomon had warned of the hit to commercial real estate in the wake of higher interest rates and a shift to remote work.

Solomon has come under scrutiny over his management of the bank's consumer banking business, which was begun by his predecessor Lloyd Blankfein but aggressively expanded by Solomon.

A recent Wall Street Journal expose described the storied firm as at "war with itself," highlighting widespread complaints of partners about Solomon, who championed the acquisition of fintech platform GreenSky in 2021, an asset the bank now plans to divest.

Shares of Goldman dipped 0.1 per cent to $336.95 in pre-market trading.