At Goldman Sachs Group Inc., there was the “war for talent”. Now the firm’s fighting to keep one talent in particular: John Waldron.Most Read from BloombergThese Homes Withstood the LA Fires. Architects Explain WhyNYC Commuters Get New Way to Dodge Traffic: $95 Helicopter RidesScaramucci,
David Solomon has refocused Goldman on its core skills, while Jane Fraser is still struggling to get Citi into shape.
Goldman Sachs has offered CEO David Solomon a lucrative compensation package to secure his leadership for the next five years.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s fourth-quarter results got an unusual boost from a type of investment the firm has been trying to wind down.
Goldman Sachs handed its top two executives retention awards worth $129 million to encourage them to keep working at the firm for another five years.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. appointed Europe’s head of financial institutions Dirk Lievens as co-chair of global financial institutions, according to a memo seen by Bloomberg News.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. isn't taking any chances with President John Waldron leaving, Bloomberg's Sridhar Natarajan says. With Chief Executive Officer David Solomon getting an $80 million retention bonus to stay to 2030,
After Goldman ended 2024 as the best-performing stock among major US banks with a 48% advance, investors will be scouring earnings for signs it can sustain that momentum. The bank is positioning itself for a long-awaited resurgence in deals after ditching major parts of a consumer foray.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has upgraded its dollar forecasts, citing a robust US economy and likely higher tariffs that may slow monetary easing.Most Read from BloombergA Blueprint for Better Bike LanesWhat Robotaxis Brought San FranciscoAmbitious High-Speed Rail Plans Advance in the Baltic RegionNYC Condo Owners May Bear Costs of Landmark Green Building LawNew York,
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. veteran Greg Olafson is leaving the firm to join merchant bank BDT & MSD Partners as president, co-head of global credit and co-chief investment officer.
(Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said it no longer sees gold reaching $3,000 an ounce by the end of the year, pushing the forecast to mid-2026 on expectations the Federal Reserve will make fewer rate cuts. Slower monetary easing in 2025 is set to ...