Goldman Sachs is Wall Street’s top brand and employs some of the world’s best traders and investment bankers, but it’s facing an inflection point. Steady fee-generating areas like wealth and asset management have become valued far more than boom-or-bust activities such as trading or advising on mergers.
The firm’s assets management arm, GSAM, launched its current strategy in 2022, positioning it as a significant growth driver for the bank. A senior executive said it aims to expand its private credit portfolio to $300 billion in five years from the current $130 billion. “It’s a huge opportunity,” Marc Nachmann, the unit’s global head of asset and wealth management, told Reuters in an interview.
His plan to expand private credit reflects a growing appetite for the financing GSAM offers non-bank lenders and other investors. This financing includes a wide range of strategies that offer different levels of risk to investors, from low-risk, plain-vanilla holdings like money market funds and corporate bond ETFs to alternative assets such as private equity, real estate, and debt.
Goldman also offers several specialized strategies that can be tailored to clients’ needs, including structured finance and treasury. It has invested in these markets for a few decades. It is a leader in providing customized financing solutions to companies with complex requirements, such as delayed draw term loans or pay-in-kind (“PIK”) options.
The unit’s many strengths are its relationships with major global institutions and banks it has worked with for decades. That is a crucial reason why the business is so highly valued, even as it faces new competitive pressures and has seen its profit decline this year.
Success in GSAM will be crucial to Goldman’s CEO, David Solomon. The company’s retail banking push and leadership style have pressured him and criticized some of his investments. GSAM will also give him a counterpoint to those who have said that the bank is not taking its customers’ needs seriously enough.
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