Goldman Sachs Group economists reportedly issued a note predicting a recession due to new U.S. tariffs and then retracted that forecast a little over an hour later after President Donald Trump paused the reciprocal tariffs.
GS is set to report first-quarter 2025 earnings. We assess the factors influencing its performance and how investors should play this stock now.
In the closing of the recent trading day, Goldman Sachs (GS) stood at $465.51, denoting a -1.13% change from the preceding trading day.
Dividends are one of the best benefits to being a shareholder, but finding a great dividend stock is no easy task. Does Goldman Sachs (GS) have what it takes?
Goldman (GS) possesses the right combination of the two key ingredients for a likely earnings beat in its upcoming report. Get prepared with the key expectations.
Shares of Goldman Sachs (GS -9.28%) tumbled on Thursday. The investment banking giant's stock lost 9.3% as of market close and was down as much as 9.5% earlier in the day.
President Trump's latest salvo in the trade war – dubbed “Liberation Day” by the White House – brings a new round of tariffs that could push the U.S. economy further into protectionist territory, according to Goldman Sachs.
Goldman Sachs is catching fresh heat over massive bonuses it has pledged to CEO David Solomon and his No. 2 executive John Waldron — with powerful shareholder voting advisors slamming the payouts as “excessive” and “poor practice.
Goldman Sachs (GS) reachead $546.29 at the closing of the latest trading day, reflecting a +0.58% change compared to its last close.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS, ETR:GOS) has increased its estimate of the likelihood of a US recession within the next 12 months to 35%, up from the previous 20%, as escalating tariffs threaten economic growth, fuel inflation, and elevate unemployment rates. The adjustment is the bank's highest recession probability since the regional banking crisis two years ago.
CoreWeave's initial public offering indicates signs of a pickup in dealmaking, which could prove to be a meaningful tailwind for the likes of the Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE: GS) in 2025. The AI cloud infrastructure company had to downsize its IPO due to macro headwinds to $40 per share.
Proxy adviser Glass Lewis recommended investors cast advisory votes "against" the pay of top Goldman Sachs executives, citing the Wall Street bank's "continued inability to align pay with performance" and retention grants that Glass Lewis called excessive.