Goldman (GS) offers 200% leveraged S&P 500 notes due Jul 2027, capped payout
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
GS Finance Corp. is offering leveraged S&P 500® index-linked notes due July 15, 2027, guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. Each note has a $1,000 face amount and pays at maturity based on the S&P 500 performance from the trade date to the determination date.
If the final index level is above the initial level, holders receive the face amount plus an upside participation rate of 200% times the index return, capped by a maximum settlement amount of $1,147.50 per $1,000. If the final index level is equal to or below the initial level, holders receive an amount equal to $1,000 plus the underlier return, which can result in a loss of principal — including the entire investment — if the index declines sufficiently. The trade date is June 11, 2026, original issue date is June 16, 2026, the determination date is July 12, 2027, and the stated maturity date is July 15, 2027.
The notes pay no interest, are subject to the credit risk of the issuer and guarantor, may have limited secondary market liquidity, and have uncertain U.S. federal income tax treatment. The pricing supplement and referenced prospectus materials contain further risks and distribution fees.
Positive
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Negative
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Insights
These are leveraged, capped S&P 500 cash-settled notes with full principal downside and no coupon.
The notes provide $1,000 face exposure with a 200% upside participation rate but a $1,147.50 cap per $1,000, so gains above approximately a 7.375% index rise are not passed through. There is no periodic interest, and the payoff structure delivers linear downside tied to the underlier return.
Key dependencies are the closing index level on the July 12, 2027 determination date and the creditworthiness of GS Finance Corp. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. Secondary market value will also reflect model-based pricing, bid-ask spreads, and the stated distribution fees.
Tax treatment is uncertain; counsel opinion 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 normally produce capital gain or loss on sale or maturity. The promoter discloses that tax treatment is not settled and the IRS could assert a different treatment.
Investors should consult advisors regarding 871(m) dividend-equivalent rules and FATCA withholding risks referenced in the supplement.


