GS (NYSE: GS) offers Russell 2000®-linked notes due May 1, 2031 with 150% cap
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
GS Finance Corp. is offering medium-term, Russell 2000®-linked cash-settled notes due May 1, 2031, fully guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.. Each $1,000 face amount pays no interest and at maturity will deliver either the face amount or a cash payment equal to $1,000 plus the underlier return capped at a maximum settlement amount of $1,500 per $1,000. The notes reference the Russell 2000® Index, use an initial underlier level of 2,756.051 (trade date April 28, 2026) and rely on the closing level on the determination date of April 28, 2031. Original issue price is 100% of face amount (underwriting discount 3.25%, net proceeds 96.75%), and GS&Co. is the calculation agent and initial purchaser. For U.S. tax purposes the notes are treated as contingent payment debt instruments with a stated comparable yield of 4.76% per annum and a projected payment at maturity of $1,269.43 per $1,000.
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Insights
These notes offer capped upside to Russell 2000® returns with full downside principal protection to face amount at maturity.
The instrument is a principal-protected, contingent-payment note that returns the face amount if the underlier is flat or down and provides upside participation only up to a 50% cap (maximum settlement amount of $1,500 per $1,000). Secondary-market value will reflect model-driven pricing, credit spreads and underlier volatility.
Key dependencies include the Russell 2000® closing level on April 28, 2031, market volatility over five years, and GS Finance/Goldman Sachs credit spreads. Liquidity is not assured; GS&Co. may make a market but is not obligated to do so.
Notes are taxed as contingent payment debt instruments; holders must use the issuer’s comparable yield for accruals.
For U.S. holders the notes require inclusion of imputed ordinary income over the term based on a comparable yield of $4.76% per annum and a projected maturity payment of $1,269.43 per $1,000. Any gain at maturity or sale is taxed as ordinary interest income under the disclosed analysis.
Secondary purchasers face special adjusted-issue-price rules and must consult tax advisors; FATCA and 871(m) considerations are described and withholding could apply in limited circumstances.
Investor repayment depends on issuer and guarantor creditworthiness; notes are unsecured obligations of GS Finance Corp. with a Goldman Sachs guarantee.
Credit risk of GS Finance Corp. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. determines ultimate payment; investors rely on both entities’ ability to pay at maturity. Market perceptions of creditworthiness will influence secondary prices and bid/ask spreads.
Material events affecting issuer/guarantor credit ratings would likely impact market value; cash-flow treatment and counterparty risk are central to valuation.


