Goldman Sachs 4Q profits jump 51%, but full year reflects difficult period for the bank

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NEW YORK (AP) — Goldman Sachs' profits jumped 51% from a year earlier, the investment bank said Tuesday, helped by the strong returns in the overall market and its wealth management division in the last three months of the year.

However the storied investment bank closed out a difficult 2023 with its profits down nearly a third from 2022, as the bank wrote off its consumer banking franchise and laid off employees in what the bank has called a turnaround year.

Goldman posted a profit of $2 billion in the last three months of the year, up from $1.33 billion in the same period a year earlier. On a per-share basis, Goldman earned $5.48 per share, beating analysts' expectations.

The New York bank saw modest improvements in its trading and investment management divisions, but saw declines in its important investment banking and advising revenues. A number of companies held off doing any big deals in 2023, due to the high cost of financing, which means Goldman and the other investment banks had fewer deals to put together.

Morgan Stanley, which also reported its fourth-quarter results on Tuesday, also posted sluggish performance in its investment bank due to the dealmaking slowdown. Morgan posted a profit decline of 32% compared to a year earlier, partly caused by one-time charges that other banks have had to report this quarter. The bank's quarterly revenue however, did beat analysts' expectations.

The biggest lift to Goldman's results came in a $838 million gain in the investments that the bank had placed in other companies, a reflection of how well the market did in the last three months of 2023.

But for the full year, Goldman struggled. Investment banking fees were down 16% from 2022, and trading in commodities, currencies and fixed income was down 18%. Goldman announced last year that it was going wind down its Marcus consumer banking division, and there are reports that it wants to sell off its credit card division.

The bank's return on common equity — a measure used by investment banks to show well they perform with their underlying assets — was 7.5% last year. Typically Goldman and other banks like to have that figure above 10%

The bank cut 7% of its workforce last year, and the money it set aside for compensation and benefits this year was up a modest 2%, likely signaling more moderate bonuses for Goldman employees who largely get their compensation in the form of year-end performance packages.

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