Goldman Sachs (GS) offers capped S&P 500 buffer notes, $10.47M issue
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
GS Finance Corp. (guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.) is offering capped, buffer‑linked notes tied to the S&P 500 Index. Each $1,000 face amount pays no interest and will return $1,077.80 at maturity if the final index level is ≥ the buffer level (85% of the initial level). If the final index level is below the buffer level, holders suffer a leveraged loss equal to approximately 1.1765% of face for each 1% decline below the buffer; the notes can lose the entire investment. The trade date is June 12, 2026, original issue date June 17, 2026, determination date June 25, 2027, and stated maturity date June 30, 2027. The offering lists an aggregate face amount of $10,474,000, an original issue price of 100% of face, underwriting discount of 1%, and net proceeds to issuer of 99% of face. The notes are subject to issuer/guarantor credit risk, limited upside (capped payoff), uncertain U.S. tax treatment, no shareholder or dividend rights, and potentially limited secondary market liquidity.
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Insights
These are non‑interest, capped buffer notes offering limited upside and leveraged downside to the S&P 500.
The notes pay no periodic interest and provide a capped maximum settlement amount of $1,077.80 per $1,000 face if the final S&P 500 level is at or above the buffer level (85% of the initial level). Below that buffer, losses accelerate by approximately 1.1765% of face per 1% index decline; the construct can result in a total loss.
Key dependencies are the final underlier closing level on the determination date, the issuer/guarantor creditworthiness, and market liquidity. The pricing supplement discloses the original issue price and underwriting discount; secondary market prices may differ materially.
U.S. federal tax treatment is uncertain; counsel treats the notes as pre‑paid derivatives.
Sidley Austin LLP opines the notes may be characterized as a pre‑paid derivative contract for U.S. federal income tax purposes, which would typically produce capital gain or loss on sale or maturity. The filing also notes 871(m) and FATCA considerations and warns the IRS could assert a different treatment.
Holders should consult advisors for personalized tax analysis; the supplement states the notes are not subject to dividend equivalent withholding as of the issue date but FATCA withholding generally applies.


