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GS Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

Goldman Sachs | 8:08 | English | 4/13/2026

Goldman Sachs delivered second-highest quarterly revenues of $17.2B and EPS of $17.55, driven by record GBM performance and robust AWM inflows, while maintaining disciplined capital deployment and returning record capital to shareholders.

Key Metrics

Net Revenues
$17.2B
2nd highest in history
Net Earnings
$5.6B
2nd highest in history
EPS
$17.55
2nd highest in history
ROE
19.8%
strong performance
ROTE
21.3%
strong performance
CET1 Ratio
12.5%
110 bps above requirement

Wichtigste Erkenntnisse

  • Record GBM revenues of $12.7B driven by strong equities financing ($2.6B, +59% YoY) and FICC financing ($1.1B), with Asia expansion showing particular strength.
  • AWM generated $62B long-term fee-based net inflows (33rd consecutive quarter) and closed Innovator acquisition adding $31B AUS, positioning firm in top 10 active ETF providers.
  • Efficiency ratio improved to 60.5% despite $5B non-comp expenses; firm investing in cloud migration and AI infrastructure while returning record $6.4B to shareholders including $5B buybacks.
Disclaimer: Financial metrics shown are extracted directly from the earnings call transcript. This is AI-generated content for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Always verify data with official company filings.
GS Q1 2026 - English
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Transcript

// Full episode script

BETA FINCH PODCAST SCRIPT

A
Alex

Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we dive deep into the numbers that matter. I'm Alex, and as always, I'm joined by my co-host Jordan. Today we're unpacking Goldman Sachs' absolutely stellar Q1 2026 results that just dropped. Before we dive in, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Jordan, these numbers are pretty eye-popping. What jumped out at you first?

J
Jordan

Alex, Goldman just delivered their second-highest quarterly performance in company history. We're talking $17.2 billion in net revenues, $5.6 billion in net earnings, and earnings per share of $17.55. That drove a return on equity of nearly 20% at 19.8%. These are numbers that would make any CFO jealous.

A
Alex

That ROE is particularly impressive. And what's driving this performance? It seems like their Global Banking & Markets division is firing on all cylinders.

J
Jordan

Absolutely. Global Banking & Markets hit record quarterly revenues of $12.7 billion with an ROE over 22%. The standout here is equities, which generated a record $5.3 billion in revenues. Their equities financing business alone brought in $2.6 billion - that's up 59% year-over-year.

A
Alex

Now, there's an interesting geographic story here too, right? Goldman's been talking about Asia as a growth opportunity.

J
Jordan

Exactly. CEO David Solomon specifically highlighted their progress in Asia, particularly in prime brokerage. They saw record average prime balances during the quarter, and this Asia expansion is a key part of their strategy to close competitive gaps in certain regions. It's paying off - financing revenues across FICC and equities now comprise nearly 40% of total revenues in those divisions.

A
Alex

Let's talk about the investment banking side. They maintained their number one position in M&A globally, but there are some interesting crosscurrents in the market.

J
Jordan

Right. Advisory revenues jumped 89% year-over-year to $1.5 billion on higher completed volumes. They're sitting on some massive deals - like the $43 billion Unilever-McCormick merger and Sysco's $29 billion Jetro acquisition. What's really telling is that even after executing on extraordinary deal flow this quarter, their backlog remained "extraordinarily robust" according to Solomon.

A
Alex

But not everything was smooth sailing. There was some softness in certain areas, and geopolitical tensions seemed to weigh on markets toward the end of the quarter.

J
Jordan

That's right. Solomon noted that while Q1 started optimistically with markets hitting record highs, the macro environment began weighing on sentiment as the quarter progressed. Volatility increased meaningfully due to AI-driven disruption concerns, uncertainty in parts of private credit, and the Middle East conflict. This particularly impacted IPO activity in March.

A
Alex

Speaking of private credit - this has been a hot-button issue in the market lately. How did Goldman address the concerns?

J
Jordan

Solomon was pretty direct about this. He pointed out that while private credit broadly is about $3.5 trillion, the direct lending space getting all the negative attention is around $1.6-1.7 trillion, with only about 20% or $230 billion in retail NAV. Goldman's platform is over 80% institutional investors with very broad diversification. Interestingly, he noted that 40% of their Q1 subscriptions in their credit BDC came from institutions, many first-time investors including insurance companies and pension funds.

A
Alex

What was his take on potential credit cycles and losses?

J
Jordan

He provided some historical context that I found fascinating. During the global financial crisis - arguably the toughest credit cycle - cumulative default rates across leverage lending were 10%, recoveries about 50%, so cumulative losses were 5-6% against coupons of 9-10%. His point was that even in severe downturns, the business model holds up, and spreads actually become more attractive for lenders.

A
Alex

Now let's talk about their AI and technology investments - this seems to be a major focus area.

J
Jordan

Goldman is doubling down on what they call "One Goldman Sachs 3.0." They're accelerating investments in cloud migration and data infrastructure as foundational elements for AI deployment. Solomon was bullish on AI's potential to drive efficiency and operating leverage, saying he has "high degree of confidence" about the firm's 3-5 year growth trajectory partly due to these technology investments.

A
Alex

What about expenses and their path to better efficiency?

J
Jordan

They're targeting a 60% efficiency ratio, and this quarter came in at 60.5%. Non-compensation expenses were up, but CFO Denis Coleman noted that about $650 million of the $750 million increase was transaction-based expenses tied to higher activity levels. So essentially, they're spending more because they're doing more business.

A
Alex

Let's touch on capital management. Their CET1 ratio dropped to 12.5% from 14.3% last quarter - that's a pretty significant move.

J
Jordan

It is, but it's strategic. They deployed capital into client franchise activities - prime brokerage, acquisition financing, lending to ultra-high net worth clients which hit a record $46 billion. They also returned a record $6.4 billion to shareholders, including $5 billion in buybacks. Management sees 12.5% as appropriate given the regulatory environment and client opportunities.

A
Alex

Speaking of regulation, there were some positive developments on the Basel III front.

J
Jordan

Yes, Solomon expressed encouragement about the direction of recent Basel III finalization and G-SIB surcharge re-proposals, calling them "more balanced and risk-sensitive" than earlier iterations. This could provide more clarity and potentially better capital treatment going forward.

A
Alex

Looking ahead, what's the outlook for the rest of the year?

J
Jordan

Solomon sees potential for a "more constructive backdrop" driven by fiscal stimulus, ongoing AI-related capital investment, and more balanced regulatory agenda. However, he acknowledged the complex geopolitical landscape and uncertainty around energy prices' impact on inflation and growth. The key theme was diversification paying off - even with weaker sponsor activity and some FICC headwinds, they delivered record results because of their scaled, global platform.

A
Alex

Any standout moments from the Q&A that investors should know about?

J
Jordan

One interesting exchange was about their Asset & Wealth Management flows. They're tracking well ahead of their 5% annual target for long-term net inflows, hitting 9% in just the first quarter. They also just closed the Innovator acquisition, adding $31 billion in assets and making them a top-10 global active ETF provider.

A
Alex

Before we wrap up, what's your key takeaway for investors?

J
Jordan

Goldman demonstrated the power of diversification this quarter. When you have record performance in some businesses offsetting softness in others, that's exactly what you want to see from a financial services firm. The question going forward is sustainability - how much of these results, particularly in equities, represent a new baseline versus elevated activity levels. Everything discussed is AI-generated analysis for educational purposes. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results. Please do your own due diligence.

A
Alex

That's a wrap on Goldman Sachs' Q1 2026 earnings. Strong results across most metrics, strategic progress in key areas like Asia and technology, and a management team that seems confident about navigating the current environment. We'll be watching how the geopolitical situation develops and whether these activity levels can be sustained. Thanks for tuning in to Beta Finch. I'm Alex, with Jordan, and we'll catch you next time for more AI-powered earnings analysis. ---

[END SCRIPT - Runtime: Approximately 6 minutes]

Frequently Asked Questions

What drove the CET1 ratio decline of 180 bps?
Growth in prime financing, acquisition financing, market risk RWAs, and record $6.4B shareholder returns including $5B buybacks.
How is private credit performing amid industry concerns?
GS credit BDC saw 7% net inflows; 40% of Q1 subscriptions from institutions. Life-to-date realized losses on FICC financing portfolio are zero excluding direct CRE.
What is the outlook for sponsor/PE activity?
Currently slower than expected but expected to accelerate. M&A backlog remains at highest level in 4 years; overall banking performance strong despite weak sponsor activity.

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