GS (GS) Buffered S&P 500® Notes due 2029 — 15% Buffer, $1,505.50 Cap
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
GS Finance Corp. is offering Buffered S&P 500® Index-Linked Notes due 2029, guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., that pay neither interest nor stock, and whose cash payment at maturity is tied to the S&P 500® Index performance measured from May 4, 2026 to the determination date. If the final index level exceeds the initial level, holders receive the index return up to a maximum settlement amount of $1,505.50 per $1,000 face amount. If the final level is down but within a 15% buffer (buffer level = 85% of initial), holders receive the full $1,000 face amount. If the final level declines more than the buffer, holders suffer losses equal to the percent decline beyond the buffer, which can materially reduce principal. Trade date is May 5, 2026, original issue date May 8, 2026, and stated maturity date May 10, 2029.
The notes are issued under GS Finance Corp.'s Medium-Term Notes, Series F program, sold initially by Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC; secondary-market liquidity is not assured. The pricing supplement highlights credit risk of the issuer and guarantor, model-based estimated values below issue price, potential commissions/discounts on secondary sales, uncertain U.S. tax treatment, and applicable FATCA and 871(m) considerations.
Positive
- None.
Negative
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Insights
Buffered principal protection limited; capped upside and issuer credit risk are central.
The notes provide a 15% buffer that preserves principal only if the S&P 500 falls no more than 15% from the initial level; greater declines cause proportional losses to principal. Upside is capped at a maximum settlement amount of $1,505.50 per $1,000, which limits participation in strong market gains.
Value depends on the underlier's path, model assumptions and the creditworthiness of GS Finance Corp. and the guarantor. Secondary market prices will reflect GS&Co.'s models, bid/ask spreads and potential dealer discounts; stated trade and maturity dates are May 5, 2026, May 8, 2026, and May 10, 2029.
U.S. federal tax treatment is uncertain; issuer counsel advises pre-paid derivative characterization.
Counsel (Sidley Austin LLP) opines the notes may be treated as a pre-paid derivative contract, producing capital gain or loss on sale, exchange or maturity. The supplement also states the notes will not be subject to section 871(m) withholding as of issue date but notes residual risks for non-U.S. holders and applicable FATCA withholding rules.
Investors should consult tax advisors for individual treatment; the supplement highlights the IRS may assert a different characterization.


