Goldman Posts Loss Due To Tax Law And Bad Trade Division

Goldman Sachs BDC, Inc.is a specialty company that has elected to be regulated as a business development company. GS BDC was formed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (Goldman Sachs) to invest primarily in middle-market companies in the United States, and is externally managed by Goldman Sachs Asset Management, L.P., an SEC-registered investment adviser and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Goldman Sachs. GS BDC seeks to generate current income and, to a lesser extent, capital appreciation primarily through direct originations of secured debt, including first lien, first lien/last-out unitranche

Goldman Sachs, like many of its competitors, had a remarkable run over the past few years. While others watched their investments crater during the Bush recession and subsequent economic fallout, big –especially those achieving the coveted “too big to fail” (TBTF) status–could seemingly do no wrong.

For quarter after quarter, banks such as Goldman posted remarkable records of success. So many months of few or even zero trading losses caused the conspiracy-minded to argue that the entire system was rigged. Many believed that some sort of secret agreements were in place which allowed the TBTF institutions to recapitalize themselves using Fed ZIRP funds while the average joe was left to suffer.

Well, those days seem to have come to an end. And for proof of that one needs to look no further than the latest results from one of the top-ranked TBTF banks, Goldman Sachs (GS).

Today, Goldman posted some bad — although better than expected — numbers. This bad report was somewhat expected, because the firm was playing some tax games to take advantage of the newly “reformed” tax-code. However, what many did not expect was the dismal performance from the firm's trading operation.

Goldman posted the worst trading performance since 2008 — when the bank was in the onset of the Bush recession and its fallout. In fact, Goldman's commodity and debt traders saw a 50% decline in revenue for the quarter. Losses were pretty much across the board and included poor performance in the oil and gas sectors as well as corporate debt.

Overall, the company posted its first loss since 2008. This loss included a $4.4 billion tax charge in order to get ahead of the new tax reform bill. That charge was more than enough to wipe out overall income of $2.3 billion for the bank this quarter.

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