Goldman's profit beats estimates as dealmaking rebound boosts investment banking
A spokesman for the firm said the company still expects to finish with a net increase in overall headcount.
IMPROVING REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
Solomon also told analysts that the regulatory environment is improving the firm's competitive position significantly.
"We're going to see a much more constructive Basel III endgame," he said, referring to the final set of proposed bank capital rules.
Solomon said he expects relief in Supplementary Leverage Ratio by next summer, more transparency around Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review, as well as rules for Global systemically important banks.
Global M&A volumes for the first nine months of the year crossed $3.43 trillion, with nearly 48% of it in the U.S., according to data from Dealogic.
The period also saw the highest average M&A volume globally and in the U.S. since 2015, in line with Solomon's prediction at last year's Reuters NEXT conference.
Goldman was among the joint book-running managers on marquee initial public offerings in the quarter, including design software firm Figma, Swedish fintech Klarna, and space tech firm Firefly Aerospace.
Goldman's CFO Denis Coleman said the quarter-end deals backlog is at the highest levels in three years.
Overall quarterly profit was $4.1 billion, or $12.25 per share, exceeding Wall Street expectations of $11 per share.
"The capital markets machine has clearly shifted into a higher gear, with robust stock prices, a reduced regulatory burden, and the prospect of lower interest rates likely to keep the momentum going," said Stephen Biggar, a banking analyst at Argus Research.
Goldman executives have been increasingly optimistic about dealmaking in recent months, with Solomon saying in September it had one of its busiest weeks for IPOs in more than four years.
ASSET AND WEALTH MANAGEMENT FOCUS
Revenue from asset and wealth management rose 17% to $4.4 billion, marking the first quarterly jump this year for the segment. This reflected record-high management fees, as well as private banking and lending revenue.
The business is a key priority for Goldman as it seeks steadier revenue from fees, which offset the volatility in its advisory and trading businesses.
Goldman said last month it would take a stake worth as much as $1 billion in T. Rowe Price, as part of a partnership to tap the asset manager's retirement money for alternative assets.
Assets under supervision climbed to $3.45 trillion, boosting management fees by 12%.
Goldman set aside $339 million as provisions for credit losses, compared with $397 million a year ago. The provisions were mainly related to its credit card portfolio.
SUSTAINED TRADING RESILIENCE
Wall Street trading desks have reaped rewards from record volatility as clients rejig portfolios to keep pace with changes in President Donald Trump's trade, foreign, and fiscal policies.
The third quarter, however, remained one of Wall Street's calmest quarters in nearly six years as an interest-rate cut from the Federal Reserve and robust AI investment pushed major U.S. stock indexes to record highs.
Still, Goldman's equities trading revenue rose 7% to $3.74 billion, fueled by higher revenue in financing, which offset lower revenue from cash equities.
Fixed income, currency and commodities hauled in $3.47 billion, 17% higher than a year ago.
(Reporting by Ateev Bhandari in Bengaluru and Saeed Azhar in New York; Editing by Lananh Nguyen, Arun Koyyur, Rod Nickel and Nick Zieminski)
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