BREAKING NEWS
Goldman Sachs reports quarterly loss of $4.97 a share - $2.1B total. CEO cites 'extraordinarily difficult operating conditions.'
Goldman Sachs Reports Wider-Than-Estimated $2.12 Billion Loss
Email | Print | A A A
By Christine Harper
Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. reported a fourth-quarter loss of $2.12 billion, the first since the company went public in 1999, as asset values and investment-banking fees declined.
The loss of $4.97 a share in the three months ended Nov. 28 compared with net income of $3.22 billion, or $7.01, in the same period a year earlier, the New York-based company said today in a statement. The average estimate of 18 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg was for a loss of $3.73 per share.
Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein and six deputies gave up bonuses this year after the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression forced Goldman Sachs to convert to a bank- holding company and accept $10 billion from the U.S. government. The firm that set a Wall Street profit record in 2007 cut 10 percent of its employees last month as its stock plummeted 69 percent this year.
``They're a survivor and they continue to pick up market share, but it's going to be volatile and you have to be able to stomach some risk,'' said William Fitzpatrick, an equity analyst at Optique Capital Management in Milwaukee, which oversees $1 billion and owns Goldman Sachs shares. Revenue is ``going to be challenged for at least a 12- to 18-month period,'' he said.
Goldman Sachs and smaller rival Morgan Stanley, the only two of the biggest five U.S. securities firms to survive, changed into banks after investors lost confidence in companies that rely on debt-market funding.
Merrill, Lehman
Merrill Lynch & Co., the third-biggest U.S. securities firm, agreed to sell itself to Bank of America Corp. in September just as Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the fourth-biggest, went bankrupt. Bear Stearns Cos., the smallest of the five, sold itself to JPMorgan Chase & Co. in March.
Morgan Stanley will post fourth-quarter results tomorrow.
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. in September bought $5 billion of preferred stock in Goldman Sachs, which raised an additional $5.75 billion by selling common shares for $123 apiece to investors. The infusions failed to restore investors' confidence, and the firm received $10 billion from the U.S. government in October as part of a $700 billion financial- industry rescue plan. Goldman Sachs closed yesterday at $66.46 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.
Glenn Schorr, an analyst UBS AG in New York, estimated in a Dec. 2 note to investors that Goldman Sachs would post a loss of $5.50 a share in the fourth quarter.
``They've performed better than their peers, as only recently have they begun to post some losses,'' said David Killian, a portfolio manager at Valley Forge Advisors LLC in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, which oversees $700 million and owns Goldman Sachs shares. ``The volatility of the returns is an important component, and the more volatile the less people are willing to pay for it because they can't predict it.''
