GS Finance (GS) offers autocallable Nasdaq-100 notes — 175% upside, 80% buffer
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
GS Finance Corp. is offering autocallable Nasdaq-100 Index®-linked notes due 2031, fully guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. The notes pay no interest and return at maturity (if not auto-called) depends on the Nasdaq-100 final level: investors receive upside participation of 175% on gains above the initial level, full principal if the final level is at or above an 80% trigger buffer, and suffer the underlier loss below that buffer (you may lose your entire investment). The notes will be automatically called on the call payment date if the underlier on the call observation date is at least the initial level, in which case holders receive $1,107.50 per $1,000 face amount on the call payment date. Key dates shown include trade date June 10, 2026, original issue date June 15, 2026, call observation date June 15, 2027, determination date June 5, 2031, and stated maturity June 10, 2031. The offering price and underwriting/structuring fees reduce economic terms versus the notes' estimated model value, market liquidity is not assured, and payments depend on issuer and guarantor creditworthiness.
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Insights
This is a long-dated, autocallable, equity-linked note with capped early-call payoff and amplified upside exposure.
The product links payoffs to the Nasdaq-100 Index with a 175% upside participation and an 80% trigger buffer. If automatically called on the observation date, the stated cash call payment is $1,107.50 per $1,000, reflecting a capped early return. Absent a call, maturity payoff ranges from full principal to a pro rata loss equal to the index return below the buffer.
Risks include no interest payments, potential loss of principal below the buffer, model-implied value below the original issue price due to underwriting/structuring fees, limited liquidity (no exchange listing), and dependence on GS Finance Corp. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. creditworthiness. Subsequent disclosures and the trade-date term setting will determine final pricing and fees.
Tax treatment is uncertain; issuer counsel treats the notes as pre-paid derivative contracts.
Counsel (Sidley Austin LLP) opines the notes may be characterized as a pre-paid derivative contract for U.S. federal income tax purposes, with capital gain or loss on disposition or maturity. The filing notes tax characterization is uncertain and the IRS could assert a different treatment.
The notes are expected to be subject to FATCA withholding rules and the 871(m) dividend-equivalent analysis was considered; holders should consult tax advisors for their specific circumstances.


