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07/14/2009:耐人寻味GS Premarket ER

(2009-07-14 06:23:09) 下一个
07/14/2009:耐人寻味GS Premarket ER

可值得玩味的是语气。GS技术形态是从底部Bear Trap一步到位拉至150阻力线。JNJ则刚越过200SMA。Timing上刚好今天双双Premarket报ER,都Beat Expectation,但盘前期指并没有大幅升高。

By Christine Harper

July 14 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. posted record earnings, beating estimates, as revenue from trading and stock underwriting reached all-time highs less than a year after the firm took $10 billion in U.S. rescue funds.

Second-quarter net income was $3.44 billion, or $4.93 a share, the New York-based bank said today in a statement. That surpassed the $3.65 per-share average estimate of 22 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg and compared with $2.09 billion, or $4.58 per share, in last year’s second quarter.

Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein made Goldman Sachs the highest-paying Wall Street firm in history before last year’s credit freeze led him to convert to a bank, accept government funds and report the first quarterly loss as a public company. This year Goldman Sachs has issued new stock, repaid the U.S. Treasury and reaped fees from selling stocks and bonds.

“Goldman’s got a sweet spot in here, they were the go-to players,” said Peter Sorrentino, a senior portfolio manager at Huntington Asset Advisors in Cincinnati, which oversees $13.8 billion including Goldman shares, before earnings were released. “For the time being, they’ve got kind of an open playing field all to themselves.”

Goldman Sachs, the fifth-biggest U.S. bank by assets, climbed 77 percent in New York Stock Exchange trading this year to close yesterday at $149.44. That’s almost triple the low of $52 on Nov. 20. The stock was at $149.81 today.

Goldman Bonds

The difference between the yield on Goldman Sachs’s bonds and U.S. Treasuries, known as the spread, has narrowed this year, indicating investors have regained comfort in lending to the company. The spread on $3.2 billion of 5.95 percent senior unsecured notes maturing in 2018 was 268 basis points yesterday, compared with 472 basis points on March 31. A basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.

“While markets remain fragile and we recognize the challenges the broader economy faces, our second-quarter results reflected the combination of improving financial market conditions and a deep and diverse client franchise,” Blankfein, 54, said in the statement.

The results follow the U.S. bank-rescue effort that funneled about $200 billion from taxpayers to financial firms, including $10 billion to Goldman Sachs, after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and near-failure of American International Group Inc.

Revenue Gains

Revenue in the three months ended June 26 was $13.8 billion, compared with $9.43 billion in the first quarter and $9.42 billion in the second quarter a year earlier. The company’s second quarter ended in May until Goldman Sachs changed its fiscal year last quarter.

The company set aside $6.65 billion for compensation and benefits in the period, or 48 percent of revenue, compared with $4.71 billion in the first quarter. The number of employees fell 1 percent to 29,400 from 29,800 at the end of March. Guy Moszkowski, an analyst at Bank of America Corp. in New York, had estimated that Goldman Sachs would set aside $6.38 billion for compensation in the second quarter.

Book value per share rose to $106.41 at the end of June compared with $98.82 at the end of March. Return on equity, a gauge of how effectively the firm invests earnings, was 23 percent in the second quarter compared with 14.3 percent in the first quarter and 20.4 percent in last year’s second quarter, the company said.

Fixed Income

Revenue from fixed-income, currencies and commodities, the company’s biggest unit, was a record $6.8 billion in the second quarter, which compared with $6.56 billion in the first quarter and $2.38 billion in last year’s second quarter.

The quarter included a loss of about $700 million on commercial mortgage loans. Roger Freeman, an analyst at Barclays Capital in New York, had estimated that Goldman Sachs would report $5.93 billion of FICC revenue that would include $680 million of credit and loan losses.

Equities revenue of $3.18 billion in the quarter, compared with $2 billion in the first quarter and $2.49 billion in last year’s second quarter.

Value-at-risk, a statistical measure of how much the firm’s trading operations could lose in a day, rose to an average of $245 million in the quarter compared with $240 million in the first quarter. In the second quarter of 2008, VaR averaged $184 million.

Equity Underwriting

Revenue from equity underwriting jumped to $736 million from $48 million in the first quarter and compared with $616 million a year ago. Debt underwriting revenue was $336 million compared with $248 million in the prior period and $269 million in last year’s second quarter. Financial advisory, which includes fees for takeover advice, fell to $368 million from $527 million in the first quarter and $800 million a year ago.

Principal investments, which includes the value of Goldman Sachs’s stakes in other companies and real estate, generated $811 million of gains after losing $1.41 billion in the first quarter.

Asset-management revenue declined to $922 million from $949 million in the first quarter and compared with $1.16 billion a year earlier. Revenue from securities services, the company’s prime brokerage business that serves hedge funds, rose to $615 million from $503 million in the first quarter.

Investors will receive earnings reports later this week from JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., and Bank of America Corp. Morgan Stanley, which was the second-biggest U.S. securities firm behind Goldman Sachs before both firms converted to banks last year, said it will report next week.

To contact the reporter on this story: Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: July 14, 2009 08:43 EDT
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