(Reuters) - Goldman Sachs is tapping several executives to lead its prized Wall Street businesses, it said on Tuesday, as part of a management reshuffle less than a week after reporting its biggest quarterly profit in more than three years.
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon promoted a slew of top bankers on Tuesday to run the firm’s biggest business units, just days after the bank boss was awarded a pair of massive bonuses. The
NCPRR and NLPC sent Goldman and JPMorgan the anti-DEI proposals, while Bank of America and Citi received proposals from NLPC and The Heritage Foundation asking them to audit whether they have surveilled customers based on their political and religious beliefs, according to the Journal.
Wall Street banks are getting ready to sell up to $3 billion of debt holdings in X, the social-media platform controlled by Elon Musk, two people with knowledge of the matter said on Friday.
The position announcements were in the firm’s global banking & markets division.
Inside the careers, accomplishments, and clients of Goldman's new heads of investment banking: Kim Posnett, Matt McClure, and Anthony Gutman.
Retention bonus and big pay raise quell any remaining questions about the CEO’s ability to stay in place
Goldman Sachs is rolling out a generative AI assistant to its bankers, traders and asset managers, the first stage in the evolution of a program that will eventually take on the traits of a seasoned Goldman employee,
Wall Street banks have started hiring for 2026 summer interns. Here are 7 tips for nailing the HireVue screening tool used by Goldman Sachs and more. Goldman expanded its management-committee ...
Goldman Sachs is tapping a slew of executives to lead its most important Wall Street businesses, it said on Tuesday. The move marks an attempt to enhance the bank's leadership, and comes days after it reported its biggest quarterly profit in more than three years.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is promoting a slate of star executives to run its biggest Wall Street business lines, spotlighting the firm’s next generation of leadership.
The state's attorney general warned Goldman, JPMorgan, BlackRock, and other heavyweights of possible legal consequences to their diversity policies.