The following is an excerpt from today’s Global Newsletter.
GreenSky continues to be a thorn in David Solomon’s side.
CNBC reported today that Goldman Sachs is likely to take a “large writedown” as they seek to offload their ill-fated acquisition.
In 2021, valuations were high, and Goldman was searching for its big break into consumer lending – GreenSky seemed to be the shining golden ticket.
Eighteen months of unprecedented economic conditions later, its sheen has definitely dulled. Far from the expected success, GreenSky has failed to turn a profit, and losses have reportedly amounted to over $3 billion.
In April, Goldman announced that they were looking to sell their ill-fated acquisition, and bidders have been flocking. However, according to one, “Everybody’s been coming in low, and the Goldman team keeps pushing back, pounding the table about the value of it.”
While the image of their leadership throwing a tantrum about their own bad business decision is amusing, it’s somewhat understandable. The lender was bought for $2.24 billion, but its valuation had already slipped to around $1.7 billion by the time the deal was signed. Now, people close to the matter say it hovers between $300-$500 million.
Goldman is still in talks to try and rally bids higher, but expectations are low.
Solomon’s year of humble pie continues.
Featured
Global |
Goldman Sachs faces big writedown on CEO David Solomon’s ill-fated GreenSky deal www.cnbc.com The turbulence marks the latest fallout from CEO David Solomon’s decision to exit most of Goldman’s consumer efforts. |
From Fintech Nexus
Global First proposed bill to regulate Earned Wage Access By Isabelle Castro Margaroli Earned Wage Access has, until now escaped the confines of sector-specific regulation. Nevada has stepped up to change that. |
Global DeFi: BlackRock files for Bitcoin ETF testing the SEC; Ethereum restaking goes live with EigenLayer By Laurence Smith The layering of the staking rewards cake has begun |
Podcast
The Fintech Coffee Break – Kevin Greene, Tassat
I sat down with Kevin to see how Tassat viewed the introduction of a new real-time payment system and how it would effect…
Also making news
- USA: SEC to Forego BlockFi’s Outstanding $30 Million Penalty—For Now The Securities and Exchange Commission has agreed to let BlockFi’s investors go to the front of the claims queue.
- Global: Why Amazon is pushing more payment functions to the cloud The firm’s web services unit is applying hosted technology to parts of transactions that take place behind the scenes in an attempt to reach smaller merchant acquirers.
- Europe: JPMorgan Starts Euro Blockchain Payments for Corporate Clients JPMorgan Chase & Co. expanded one of the most high-profile projects to bring blockchain technology to traditional banking, introducing euro-denominated payments for corporate clients using its JPM Coin.
- USA: P2P lending app turns to MoneyGram so unbanked users can receive funds Zirtue will now let borrowers retrieve funds from MoneyGram locations rather than being limited to a bank account or debit card.
- USA: Why You Shouldn’t Always Tell Your Bank How Much You Make Requests for income information are rising as a result of tighter lending standards and economic uncertainty.
- Global: How Visa is fighting fraud in an era of deep fakes Fraud is an ever-present problem for financial services. But recent innovations in the sector of deep fakes are making things harder for risk and security operations in the industry, according to Mike Lemberger, SVP and Chief Risk Officer of Visa.