Current:Home > NewsGoldman Sachs is laying off as many as 3,200 employees this week -ApexWealth
Goldman Sachs is laying off as many as 3,200 employees this week
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:10:50
At Goldman Sachs, the New Year is starting with thousands of job cuts.
One of Wall Street's biggest banks plans to lay off up to 3,200 employees this week, as it faces a challenging economy, a downturn in investment banking, and struggles in retail banking.
It is one of the biggest rounds of layoffs at Goldman since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
Goldman, like many other investment banks, has seen its profits take a hit as markets have tumbled since last year because of aggressive interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve.
The downturn has led to sharp declines in the number of deals and stock listings, as well as trading activity. Goldman has also struggled to gain much traction in consumer banking despite hefty investments.
"Wall Street is still Wall Street, and that means a very intensive environment, making money for their customers and the firm, having high intensity and adjusting on a dime as conditions change," says Mike Mayo, an analyst with Wells Fargo who has covered commercial banks for decades.
Goldman is restructuring its business
Goldman CEO David Solomon has been emphasizing the difficulty of this current economic environment.
Financial firms, like technology firms, had increased their head counts during the pandemic when business was booming, but they are now being forced to announce job cuts and to rethink how they operate. Goldman had just over 49,000 employees at the end of September.
In October, Goldman announced a broad restructuring plan. It combined trading and investment banking into one unit and created a new division that is focused on the company's digital offerings.
Goldman is also turning the page on its attempt to compete against the likes of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America in retail banking.
For almost a decade, Goldman Sachs has tried to make inroads there, but its consumer-facing brand, Marcus, never caught on.
Marcus has been folded into Goldman's asset and wealth management unit as part of that restructuring, and its head announced plans to leave the firm last week.
A return to the normal practice of cutting staff
It's not just the business downturn that's sparking layoff fears in Wall Street.
Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street firms have traditionally cut low-performing staff each year, a practice they put on pause during the pandemic. Goldman, for example, didn't do these regular layoffs in 2020, 2021, and 2022.
Chris Kotowski, an analyst with Oppenheimer & Co., says everyone working on Wall Street gets accustomed to these kinds of staff reductions, difficult as they are. It's just part of the business of doing business.
"You know, people just don't work out," he says. "Sometimes you expanded into an area that just wasn't fruitful, and sometimes you've just overhired."
And even after this week's layoffs, Goldman Sachs's head count is expected to be larger than it was before the pandemic.
veryGood! (3979)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Gymnast Shilese Jones Reveals How Her Late Father Sylvester Is Inspiring Her Road to the Olympics
- Former Ugandan steeplechase Olympian Benjamin Kiplagat found fatally stabbed in Kenya
- Lithium-ion battery fire in a cargo ship’s hold is out after several days of burning
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Sheet of ice drifts out into lake near Canada carrying 100 fishers, rescuers say
- Cowboys vs. Lions Saturday NFL game highlights: Dallas holds off Detroit in controversial finish
- Ireland Could Become the Next Nation to Recognize the Rights of Nature and a Human Right to a Clean Environment
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Cowboys deny Lions on 2-point try for 20-19 win to extend home win streak to 16
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Climate activists from Extinction Rebellion target bank and block part of highway around Amsterdam
- Detroit Pistons face final chance to avoid carrying NBA-record losing streak into 2024
- Washington Law Attempts to Fill the Void in Federal Regulation of Hazardous Chemicals
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- In rare apology, Israeli minister says she ‘sinned’ for her role in reforms that tore country apart
- Texas' Arch Manning is the Taylor Swift of backup quarterbacks
- On her 18th birthday, North Carolina woman won $250,000 on her first ever scratch-off
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
German chancellor tours flooded regions in the northwest, praises authorities and volunteers
$20 for flipping burgers? California minimum wage increase will cost consumers – and workers.
UFOs, commercial spaceflight and rogue tomatoes: Recapping 2023's wild year in space
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Influential former Texas US Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson dies at 88
Special counsel Jack Smith urges appeals court to reject Trump's claim of presidential immunity
Detroit Pistons beat Toronto Raptors to end 28-game losing streak