『Goldman Sachs Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis』のカバーアート

Goldman Sachs Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

Goldman Sachs Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

**BETA FINCH PODCAST SCRIPT**

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**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?

**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.

**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.

**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.

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

**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.

**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.

**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.

**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.

**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.

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

**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.

**ALEX:** What was his take on potential credit cycles and losses?

**JORDAN:** He provided some historical context that I found fascinating. During the global financial crisis - arguably the toughes

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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