Goldman Sachs remains a premier global franchise, successfully pivoting toward durable Asset & Wealth Management fees. However, current market pricing implies an uninterrupted continuation of peak-cycle earnings and permanently expanded multiples. Fair value range: low $451, high $787, with mid-point at $628.
Market exuberance prices Goldman at peak-cycle margins and elevated multiples.
Through-the-cycle normalized ROE of 13.04% implies a fair value of $628.13.
Significant downside risk exists if capital markets activity normalizes.
Fair value
$628
Margin of safety
-49.1%
Confidence
73/100
Moat
6.5/10
Educational research only - not investment advice, an offer, or a trade instruction. Confirm current data and do your own due diligence before acting.
$936.48Price
Low $451.19
Mid $628.13
High $786.68
Goldman Sachs remains a premier global franchise, successfully pivoting toward durable Asset & Wealth Management fees. However, current market pricing implies an uninterrupted continuation of peak-cycle earnings and permanently expanded multiples.
Intangible Assets
Premier global investment banking franchise and brand equity.
Switching Costs
Deep institutional relationships in Asset & Wealth Management.
A prolonged capital markets freeze combined with severe macroeconomic contraction drives M&A and underwriting volumes to multi-year lows. Simultaneously, mark-to-market losses on private investments erode book value, forcing a reduction in share repurchases to preserve regulatory capital.
Our financial-history view of GS (GS) covers revenue, gross profit, operating income, and net income across the past five fiscal years, with year-over-year growth and margin context for each line.
The revenue trajectory is reported in the financial-history section with year-over-year growth rates. Direction and acceleration are summarised inline; the full table sits within the parent financials tab.
We track operating income alongside operating margin so the reader can separate top-line growth from operating leverage. The numbers analysis subsection flags one-offs, restructuring, and stock-based-compensation effects when material.
Net income is shown together with EPS so dilution and buybacks are visible alongside profit. Where reported net income diverges materially from operating cash flow, the discrepancy is called out in the numbers-analysis subsection.
FAQ
GS — frequently asked questions
Based on our latest analysis, GS looks meaningfully overvalued. The current price is $936 versus a composite fair-value midpoint of $628 (range $451–$787), which implies roughly 32.9% downside to the midpoint.
Our composite fair-value range for GS is $451–$787, with a midpoint of $628. The range is triangulated across multiple valuation models (discounted earnings, forward earnings scenarios, peer multiples, and where applicable owner earnings or reverse DCF) and weighted by reliability for GS's archetype.
Our current rating for GS is Sell with a confidence score of 73/100. Sell. With shares trading at $936.48 against our $628.13 fair value, the risk/reward is heavily skewed to the downside, implying 33% downside risk. This is research for educational purposes, not personalized investment advice.
The top risks our latest report flags for GS are: Sustained Capital Markets Freeze; Regulatory Capital Hike; Asset Management Write-downs. The single biggest risk is Sustained Capital Markets Freeze: Prolonged macroeconomic uncertainty stalls M&A and underwriting pipelines, structurally dragging investment banking revenues.
Our current rating for GS is Sell, issued with a confidence score of 73/100 and a moat score of 6.5/10. The rating reflects the composite fair-value range ($451–$787) versus the current price of $936.
GS is classified as a financial stock. Archetype determines how every downstream parameter — discount rate, terminal growth, deceleration curve, terminal multiple, scenario probability weights, scorecard weights, and which valuation models are prioritized — is calibrated for GS.