Showing posts with label Goldman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goldman. Show all posts

Goldman's Golden Trading Goose Lays An Egg, Stock Looks Fairly-Valued At Best

Lloyd Blankfein's firm was no master of the universe this past quarter
Goldman Sachs is a leading global investment banking, securities and
investment management firm that provides a wide range of financial
services to a substantial and diversified client base that includes
corporations, financial institutions, governments and high-net-worth
individuals. It competes with Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Credit
Suisse, and UBS.

We estimate that bonds, currencies & commodities trading constitute
around 37% of our $167 price estimate for Goldman's stock, with
equities trading accounting for around 17%. Our price estimate is
roughly inline with the current market price.

*Trading Under Pressure*
Of the financial bellwethers, the picture has been mixed so far as
JPMorgan reported strong earnings but Citigroup missed on account of
poor trading revenues. Citigroup blames tight credit spreads which is
due in part to a historically flat yield curve and loose monetary
policy which makes trading more difficult for many fixed income
traders. (See "Declining Fixed Income Revenues Could Spell Downside
for Citigroup Stock"). In addition to this, fixed income trading has
been down.

While Goldman is the gold standard in the trading business, with its
fixed income, currencies and commodities trading division one of the
most profitable in the industry, the macro environment has a been
difficult one for trading in the last half of the year.
Given Goldman's reliance on its trading and market making business,
many feel that Goldman will be one of the banks most impacted by the
Volcker rule.

The trading assets for bonds, currencies and commodities increased
from $220 billion in 2005 to $320 billion in 2007 but then fell to
$270 billion in 2009 due to the economic downturn. With the economic
recovery in swing, we expect it to gradually increase to around $300
billion by the end of our forecast period. However, the regulatory
issues and volatile trading environment may provide downside risk to
our estimates. If the trading assets for bonds, currencies and
commodities falls to around $240 billion by the end of our forecast
period, it would mean around 7% downside to our current price estimate
for Goldman's stock.

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*_Overhangs in the Open Now, Could Lead to Upside_*
However, the financial sector appears to be in much better shape
entering 2011 than 2010. Not only is the macro economic picture much
better but many of the regulatory unknowns that served as an overhang
are now at least out in the open. We expect that banks like Goldman
Sachs and Morgan Stanley, that depend more on trading and investment
banking for revenues will be forced to adjust their operations with
the rulings out there in the open.

As an example, both Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are looking to
spin off units of their proprietary trading business, and Goldman is
changing its reporting structure to increase the transparency of its
proprietary trading business. These factors could add some visibility
to the stocks and help both the banks and their investors focus on
other issues than government regulations.

The yield on trading assets for bonds, currencies & commodities has
been following an increasing trend historically with the only
correction being in 2007 and 2008 due to the economic downturn. We
expect the yield on trading assets for bonds, currencies &
commodities, which was nearly 9% in 2009 to follow a decreasing trend
reaching 5% towards the end of the Trefis forecast period. If the
decrease is less than we expected 6% by the end of our forecast
period, it would mean around 7% upside to our current price estimate
for Goldman's stock.

Notes:
* JP Morgan Downgrades Goldman Sachs on Volcker Rule [↩]

Source: Forbes.com
READ MORE - Goldman's Golden Trading Goose Lays An Egg, Stock Looks Fairly-Valued At Best

UPDATE 8-Goldman opens books to scrutiny, no wider shake-up

Tue Jan 11, 2011 6:46pm EST
* Changes seen as attempt to repair image and reputation
* Bank has been accused of putting its own interests first
* To disclose how much money it makes from prop trading
* Top executives, including CEO Blankfein, unscathed
* Goldman shares fractionally lower (Adds reference to forthcoming
U.S. Senate report on financial crisis in final paragraph)

By Dan Wilchins
NEW YORK, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N)
pledged to be more open about how it makes money and to put the
interests of clients ahead of its own in an effort to rebut
criticism it acted more like a hedge fund than a bank during
the credit boom and misled investors.

Goldman revealed for the first time how much it made from
trading and investing on its own behalf, which many investors
have suspected is a key source of the bank's profits, during
the first three quarters of the year.

The bank also made structural changes to its divisions, but
there was no major management shake-up, leaving in place Chief
Executive Lloyd Blankfein.
Blankfein and his firm came under siege last April after
U.S. securities regulators sued Goldman and bond trader Fabrice
Tourre for selling repackaged mortgage bonds to investors
without disclosing key information about the securities.

Tourre referred to himself as "fabulous Fab" and to a
collateralized debt obligation product he helped create as "a
little like Frankenstein turning against his own inventor." To
many critics of Goldman, he embodied the firm's willingness to
put its own interests ahead of clients.

Soon after the SEC lawsuit, Goldman commissioned a report
to determine how it should change the way it does business.
The report, released on Tuesday, recommends creating at
least three internal committees and focuses mainly on
disclosure and oversight. It makes few recommendations for how
Goldman will change the way it does business day to day and
some observers questioned how much will change.

"I'm not terribly convinced it produces a new culture,"
said Cornelius Hurley, a professor and director of Boston
University's Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law. "It
seems to be part of their concerted public relations effort."
Still, Goldman did shed new light on the heretofore murky
realm of proprietary trading profits, revealing that its
investment and lending group --- which includes the bank's bets
with its own money --- accounted for nearly 30 percent of
pre-tax earnings in the first three quarters of 2010.

And Goldman's disclosure overhaul could boost pressure on
rivals to follow suit, especially after the sweeping Dodd Frank
financial reform bill shone a spotlight on the propensity of
big Wall Street firms to make risky bets with their own
capital.
Source: Reuters.Com
READ MORE - UPDATE 8-Goldman opens books to scrutiny, no wider shake-up