TLDR
- First-quarter profits reached $5.63 billion, marking a 19% increase compared to last year
- Earnings per share of $17.55 surpassed Wall Street’s $16.47 projection; total revenue of $17.23 billion exceeded forecasts
- Equity trading business achieved an all-time quarterly high of $5.33 billion, gaining 27%, though fixed income declined 10% to $4.01 billion
- Dealmaking revenues jumped 48% to $2.84 billion, with the bank capturing leading position in global M&A advisory rankings
- Wealth and asset management segment grew 10% to $4.08 billion; firm finalized Innovator Capital Management acquisition
Goldman Sachs delivered an impressive start to earnings season, posting first-quarter profits of $5.63 billion β representing a 19% year-over-year increase.
GOLDMAN SACHS $GS Q1β26 EARNINGS HIGHLIGHTS
πΉ Revenue: $17.23B (Est. $16.97B) π’; UP +14% YoY
πΉ EPS: $17.55 (Est. $16.5) π’; UP +24% YoY
πΉ Equities: $5.33B (Est. $4.9B) π’; record, UP +27% YoY
πΉ FICC: $4.01B (Est. $4.87B) π΄; DOWN -10% YoY
πΉ Investment Banking Fees: $2.84B;β¦ pic.twitter.com/isgLlCshE7— Wall St Engine (@wallstengine) April 13, 2026
The bank’s earnings per share reached $17.55, comfortably beating Wall Street’s consensus estimate of $16.47. Total net revenue of $17.23 billion similarly outpaced the $17 billion projection, based on FactSet data.
The standout performance was powered by an unprecedented quarter in equity trading operations. Revenue from equities trading and financing surged 27% to reach $5.33 billion β marking an all-time record for the division.
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., GS
The only area showing weakness was fixed income, currencies and commodities, which decreased 10% to $4.01 billion.
Despite the robust performance, CEO David Solomon maintained a measured outlook. “The geopolitical landscape remains very complex β so disciplined risk management must remain core to how we operate,” he stated in the earnings release.
Ongoing volatility stemming from the Iran conflict has driven clients to adjust their holdings and implement hedging strategies, creating opportunities that trading operations typically capitalize on. Goldman was strategically positioned to benefit from this heightened activity.
Investment Banking Leads the Way
Dealmaking fees emerged as another major highlight. The segment skyrocketed 48% year-over-year to $2.84 billion, supported by sustained strength in M&A activity.
Worldwide M&A transaction volume reached $1.38 trillion during the first quarter, according to Dealogic. Jefferies analysts highlighted that Goldman captured the largest market share as global M&A proxy fees climbed 19% to $11.3 billion.
Goldman played advisory roles in several marquee transactions during the period, including Unilever’s announced combination of its food operations with McCormick to establish a $65 billion entity, plus Equitable’s proposed merger with Corebridge forming a $22 billion insurance company.
The initial public offering landscape remains robust. Goldman obtained a lead underwriter position for SpaceX’s expected June market debut, which could generate $75 billion in proceeds at a $1.75 trillion company valuation. The institution also served as a bookrunner for PayPay’s $880 million U.S. public offering.
Wealth Management Holds Steady
The wealth and asset management operation generated revenue of $4.08 billion, representing a 10% uptick. Goldman has been strategically expanding this division to create more stable income streams alongside its traditionally cyclical trading and advisory businesses.
The bank’s private credit vehicle weathered an industry-wide redemption wave last quarter. Withdrawal requests totaled just under 5% of fund assets β remaining within established limits β even as AI-related concerns created broader turbulence across private credit markets.
Goldman finalized its purchase of Innovator Capital Management, an active exchange-traded fund manager, earlier this month. This transaction elevates the firm’s total ETF assets under supervision to $90 billion.
GS stock has appreciated more than 3% year-to-date in 2026, building on a 53% advance in 2025.
