Monday, November 17, 2008

"Goldman Sachs would have to de-lever and that its profitability would therefore suffer. "

Let's watch what happens with this issue. From the FT:

"Goldman Sachs last month converted itself from an investment bank to a bank-holding company. Mr Blankfein said that after the conversion, Goldman had 17 per cent of tier one capital – which was well above the minimum required.

Three days after the conversion, Goldman raised $11bn worth of equity and two weeks later, another $10bn in preferred stock.

Mr Blankfein took exception to the belief that, as a bank holding company, Goldman Sachs would have to de-lever and that its profitability would therefore suffer.

He presented a chart showing Goldman Sachs’ return on equity since going public in 1999 and its leverage ratios during the same period. The chart showed that the two measurements were not highly correlated."

So, let's see what happens with these capital requirements going forward. Are they eventually going to argue that they can keep them lower than required for banks when the right time arises? You say that will be a long time. Maybe. But the loss of competition and and competitors problems is a world of opportunities:

“The most important opportunities in Goldman Sachs’ history came in times of stress,” he said. “Our culture has given us the wherewithal to embrace change.”

In the past 12 months, as the competitive landscape on Wall Street changed, Mr Blankfein said Goldman Sachs had gained more than 100 new clients that had either been involved in billion-dollar deals or raised more than $500m in funds...

Mr Blankfein said Goldman’s ability to move nimbly across markets would allow it to take advantage of market dislocations. At the same time, he told investors that the firm did not want to make any rash moves.

Earlier this month, the Financial Times reported that, at the behest of federal regulators, Mr Blankfein had placed a call to Citigroup chief executive VikramPandit to discuss the possibility of a combination. The conversation led nowhere.

“We’re not going to be stubborn,” Mr Blankfein said. “I’m a steward for a company that’s well over a century old. I’m going to consider everything, but hopefully not going to be provoked into doing anything rash or anything I’ll spend the next 10 years trying to reverse.”

See.

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