Why David Viniar Didn’t Cause Goldman’s Shares to Fall

"We’re cautious about the near-term outlook for our businesses as

we see dislocation in some of the world’s capital markets has continued."

Goldman

Sachs CFO David Viniar, in a conference call with reporters.

Now, I do appreciate that Viniar was talking to reporters, so what

he had to say must have been very important. But really. Is there a

single stock-market investor anywhere in the world who’s unaware of continued

dislocation in global capital markets? (Hint: the ECB just poured half

a trillion dollars of liquidity into the European financial system. Does

that sound normal to you?)

The fact is that Viniar, like any CFO worth his salt, is a naturally cautious

chap. He’s naturally cautious on every single earnings call he’s ever on.

If there are two things which are absolutely known to investors in GS, it’s

that (a) there’s continued dislocation in global capital markets, and (b) David

Viniar is a cautious chap.

Meanwhile, on the same conference call, Viniar announced that Goldman had made

a record amount of money in its lastest quarter, and also announced that he

was allocating $12.5 billion towards buying back Goldman Sachs stock, even at

its present levels of more than $200 per share.

But here’s the thing: Goldman shares actually fell more than $7 today, even

as the broader market rose. Some reporters simply did their job, and reported

this fact, sometimes using words like "despite"

or "even

though" to make it clear that Goldman’s earnings really

were very good. But it was inevitable that someone was going to write a

lede like this:

Goldman Sachs Group Inc said on Tuesday fourth-quarter earnings rose 2 percent,

beating expectations and capping a record year, but its shares fell after

the investment bank cautioned that markets will remain challenging in the

near future.

Was that really why Goldman shares fell? I very much doubt it. There are other

reasons why Goldman stock might have fallen today, if you’re a believer in stock-market

causality – the Value-at-Risk numbers, especially, seemed to imply that

Goldman’s risk-adjusted profits might actually have fallen, and that any increase

in profit was essentially paid for by taking on a lot of extra risk.

But the fact is that any given stock, on any given day, even if that day sees

the release of an earnings report, moves in an essentially random direction.

If you want to see what’s happened to Goldman Sachs shares, don’t look at where

they closed today compared to where they closed yesterday: look at where they

are now compared to a month, or a quarter, or a year ago.

After all, most of the news in the Goldman Sachs earnings report was largely

expected, and therefore "priced in": it’s not like the fact that Goldman

made lots of money by selling its interest in a bunch of power plants, for instance,

came as any surprise to the markets. So if you want to see how the market has

reacted to the past quarter’s news, look at how the share price has moved over

the past three months; don’t look at how the share price has moved over the

past day.

Now, it would be great for my argument if Goldman shares had actually risen

substantially over the past three months; in fact, they haven’t. They rose to

over $240 at the end of October, but they’ve been falling back since then, and

now they’re pretty much back to where they were in mid-September. Still, if

you’re looking for a decline, that’s the decline you should be explaining. And

if you want to associate that decline with continued dislocation in

global capital markets, go right ahead. It’s just silly to pretend that the

dislocation came as any surprise to Goldman’s shareholders.

This entry was posted in banking, stocks. Bookmark the permalink.