Goldman Sachs aims to double lending to wealthy private bank clients
Send a link to a friend
[June 13, 2024] By
Saeed Azhar
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs aims to double its lending over the
next five years to ultra-wealthy private bank clients with account sizes
exceeding $10 million, as it gathers more deposits to supercharge
lending, the bank's private banking chief told Reuters.
The plans, previously unreported, were disclosed to Reuters by Nishi
Somaiya, Goldman's global head of private banking, lending and deposits.
The Wall Street giant wants to make more loans to wealthy individuals
and families for big purchases, ranging from luxury homes to sports
teams, as part of its strategy to bolster its wealth management
operations.
Goldman declined to quantify the full scope of its lending to wealthy
clients, who typically have a net worth of at least $30 million. The
private bank's outstanding loans stood at $33 billion in the first
quarter. That does not capture other undisclosed commitments, which
could add more to the total.
"We were not really focused on lending to our private wealth clients --
we did a little bit of it, but it wasn't a big focus," CEO David Solomon
told Reuters in an interview. "They have borrowing needs and we're well
positioned to serve them competitively."
The lending push is a silver lining from Goldman's ill-fated consumer
business. While the expansion into retail banking largely flopped and
was unpopular among some employees and investors, it still attracted a
surge of deposits into consumer savings accounts.
Goldman's total deposits jumped to $441 billion in the first quarter,
with over 39% coming from consumer accounts, versus $190 billion in
total deposits at the end of 2019.
Those deposits have also been put to use as a cheap source of funding
for Goldman's markets division.
The unit posted record growth in financing in the first quarter for
trading and private equity clients, by providing short-term loans to
clients using their holdings such as real estate assets or securities as
collateral.
As its deposits swelled, "we have grown, and will continue to grow,
lending across our institutional businesses," Somaiya said.
Goldman's lending in wealth management as a percentage of its wealth
client assets is 3%, well below an average of 9%among its peers,
according to a report by Autonomous Research.
[to top of second column] |
People walk in the Goldman Sachs global headquarters in Manhattan,
New York, U.S., November 15, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Bank of America's total outstanding loans and leases to wealth
management clients stood at around $220 billion at the end of its
last financial year, similar to JPMorgan Chase's.
"There's a real opportunity for us to grow in our private banking
activities," given that gap, Somaiya said.
The expansion of lending to wealthy individuals who have assets of
at least $30 million, as well as to private equity firms and asset
managers, helps Goldman broaden its business beyond trading and
investment banking.
"This is a way to increase their wallet share of a client who they
already have a relationship with," said Ebrahim Poonawala, banking
analyst at Bank of America.
"You deepen the client relationship, you create sticky revenue."
Investors will watch to see if the wealth lending improves the
return on equity (ROE) for the bank's broader asset and wealth
management division.
Goldman has set a target to boost the unit's ROE from a current 9.9%
to a mid-teens percentage in the medium term.
Its asset management division is also making more loans using
outside money from investors instead of the bank's own balance
sheet.
Goldman Sachs Asset Management set a goal to more than double its
private credit portfolio to $300 billion in five years.
Lending is seen as a strategic tool to expand Goldman's services to
its ultra-high net worth clients who have a broad choice of lenders
and are infrequent borrowers. "We can provide them leverage often
against illiquid assets, if they need lending for an acquisition -
home, hobby, another company, sports team - or want to use a margin
loan against securities to invest more," Somaiya said.
For instance, wealthy clients can use their holdings of alternative
assets or art hanging on their walls as collateral for the loans,
she added. "We are creating liquidity for a rainy day," she said.
(Reporting by Saeed Azhar, additional reporting by Lananh Nguyen;
Editing by David Gregorio)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |