A fresh bout of US regulatory scrutiny is setting off a hiring spree at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. as the company’s leaders seek to remediate issues raised by banking supervisors.
The Wall Street firm is enlisting several hundred new staffers to help address concerns from authorities including the Federal Reserve, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be named discussing confidential plans. The back-office hiring binge comes even as the firm cuts executives from money-making ranks amid a slump in business.
“We are not permitted to comment on any supervisory matters related to our regulators,” a company spokesperson said in a statement. “Therefore we are not able to comment on these reports.”
A representative for the Fed declined to comment.
Though regulators routinely question large financial firms, Goldman executives privately describe growing pressure from the Fed over the past year. If left unsatisfied, supervisors can impose increasingly formal and potentially onerous measures behind the scenes to force banks to overhaul operations and procedures.
Many big financial firms contend with such actions out of view, but in more severe cases they can spiral into public orders. Goldman has been dealing with a confidential measure imposed by the Fed that predates the current increase in scrutiny, one person said. That may add to the pressure on managers to resolve concerns.
Unclear is what deficiencies the firm is seeking to address now that it has largely abandoned an effort to build out a consumer bank that was said to have set off questions from the Fed last year. The scrutiny has touched areas outside that unit, some of the people said.
While some managers blame the firm’s failed retail foray for inviting regulatory attention, Chief Executive Officer David Solomon has told colleagues it reflects a generally tougher regulatory climate for the industry at large.
The blowup of investment firm Archegos Capital Management in 2021 also set off a prolonged look at how Wall Street banks handle counterparty credit risks. And Goldman has disclosed it’s cooperating with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and other governmental bodies examining how it ran its credit-card business.
Goldman’s new hiring push is the first tangible fallout to emerge from regulators’ heightened interest in the firm, which Bloomberg reported in September. It’s especially notable during a year in which the company is reacting to a market slowdown by shrinking headcount — cutting thousands of jobs in a series of culls. The bank’s earnings are down 35% through midyear after posting a 48% drop last year.
It can take awhile to overhaul compliance departments to regulators’ satisfaction. The current CEOs of Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc. both came into their posts on a mission to appease regulators — and are still at it years later.
Wall Street executives often note such projects require significant portions of their attention, cutting into time that they could be using to hone strategies or compete for more business.
This article was provided by Bloomberg News.