Goldman’s Stunning Earnings

Hank Paulson surely has a hint of a smile on his face this morning. Even as

he earnestly tries to protect

Main Street from suffering too much as a result of the Wall Street crunch,

in the back of his head he’ll know that his his alma mater, Goldman Sachs, just

reported earnings

of $2.85 billion in the third quarter.

For a firm whose hedge funds are imploding, Goldman Sachs certainly seems to

be doing astonishingly well: everything else it touches turns to gold. Profits

were up 79% from a year ago; revenue is up 63%; return on equity is now well

over 30%. The firm made money in mortgages, thanks to its hedging strategy,

monetized the green-technology bubble by flipping a wind-power company for $2.15

billion, and, oh yes, saw investment-banking revenues rise above $2 billion

for the quarter as well. That $1.5 billion write-down on junk-rated loans? Who

cares?

It’s a commonplace to describe Goldman Sachs as a glorified hedge fund, but

in fact it’s much better than that, as these results show. Somehow, its prop

traders can consistently make enormous sums of money with Goldman’s own capital

much more effectively than the same traders can do with other people’s money

when they start up a hedge fund either internally or externally.

Goldman’s results also make it much harder for Morgan Stanley or Bear Stearns

to blame market conditions for their weak earnings. A good investment bank should

be able to thrive on volatility; Goldman certainly seems to be doing so.

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