Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) sells 4.00% senior notes due March 19, 2029
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. is offering fixed rate senior notes due March 19, 2029 with an interest rate of 4.00% per annum. The trade date is March 13, 2026 and the original issue date is March 17, 2026. Notes will be issued in denominations of $1,000 and integral multiples, pay interest each March 17 and September 17 (with the March 2029 payment on the maturity date), and will be issued in book-entry form through DTC.
Interest accrual uses the 30/360 (ISDA) day count convention. The notes will not be listed on an exchange, will be issued under the senior debt indenture, and Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC is the calculation agent and expected underwriter. The original issue price and certain concessions to fee-based accounts are described in the pricing supplement; specific aggregate offering amounts are set on the trade date.
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Insights
Goldman Sachs is placing a fixed-rate senior note maturing in 2029 at 4.00%.
The structure is a plain-vanilla senior fixed-rate note issued under the Medium-Term Notes program in denominations of $1,000. Interest is paid semiannually on the stated dates and accrues using the 30/360 (ISDA) convention, which is standard for institutional debt and affects accrued interest calculations.
Transaction mechanics and distribution are handled by Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC; the pricing supplement notes that the precise original issue price and concessions to fee-based accounts will be set on the trade date (March 13, 2026), so final investor economics hinge on that trade-date pricing.
Interest is taxable as ordinary income and the notes are subject to FATCA withholding.
For U.S. holders, interest will be taxed as ordinary income when accrued or received according to the holder's accounting method. Dispositions will generate capital gain or loss measured by sale proceeds versus adjusted tax basis.
The supplement confirms FATCA withholding may apply to the notes per Treasury regulations; holders should consult tax advisors for implications and basis tracking given the expected original issue price variability described in the supplement.

