Welcome to our dedicated page for Goldman Sachs Group SEC filings (Ticker: GS), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. files regulatory documents that cover operating results, material events, capital structure and corporate governance. Its 8-K filings document earnings releases, Regulation FD disclosures, debt and subordinated debt issuances under shelf registration statements, and changes involving directors or executive officers.
The filing record also identifies Goldman Sachs’ NYSE-listed common stock, preferred depositary shares, capital securities and medium-term notes issued by GS Finance Corp. Proxy materials disclose annual meeting matters, board governance, executive compensation and shareholder voting items, while registration-related exhibits document securities offerings and related terms.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering auto-callable notes linked to the S&P 500® Futures 40% VT Adaptive Response 6% Decrement Index (USD) ER.
The notes pay no interest and may be called quarterly starting in February 2027 if the index meets step-down call levels, returning principal plus a call premium. If not called and the index is at least 60% of its initial level at maturity in February 2031, holders receive a capped maximum of $1,950.04 per $1,000 face amount. If the index falls more than 40%, repayment is fully exposed to losses and investors can lose their entire principal.
The underlying index uses up to 500% leverage and a 6% per annum daily decrement, which magnify downside moves and systematically drag performance versus a similar index without a decrement. The indicative model value at pricing is expected between $885 and $925 per $1,000, below the 100% issue price, and secondary market prices may be further reduced by dealer spreads and market factors.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering autocallable contingent coupon (with memory) barrier notes linked to ordinary shares of FTAI Aviation Ltd. Each note has a $10 principal amount and pays quarterly contingent coupons only if the share price is at least 55% of the starting value.
The contingent coupon for a single period is expected to be between $0.4375 and $0.4625 per unit, equivalent to about 17.50%–18.50% per year, with a memory feature that can make up missed coupons later if conditions are met. The notes can be called automatically on semi-annual dates if the share price is at or above the starting value, returning principal plus the due coupon.
If the notes are not called and the share price has fallen more than 45% at maturity, investors take one‑for‑one losses below the starting value, with up to the entire principal at risk. The estimated value on the pricing date is expected between $9.25 and $9.55 per $10 note, reflecting structuring and distribution costs, and the notes have limited liquidity, a $100,000 minimum purchase, and are fully exposed to the credit risk of GS Finance Corp. and its guarantor.
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. reported that Kathryn H. Ruemmler has decided to retire from her positions as Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel. Her retirement will be effective June 30, 2026. The filing does not describe any other management changes or related compensatory arrangements.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering $5,000,000 of floating rate notes due February 17, 2033. The notes pay quarterly interest at compounded SOFR plus 0.95% per annum, subject to a minimum rate of 0.50% per annum, on $1,000 denominations.
The original issue price is 100% of principal, with a 1.15% underwriting discount and net proceeds of 98.85% of principal. The notes are unsecured obligations exposed to the credit risk of GS Finance Corp. and its guarantor, are not bank deposits, and are not FDIC insured.
The notes are not redeemable before maturity and are not expected to be listed, so secondary liquidity may be limited and prices may fall if interest rates rise. Interest is treated as ordinary income for U.S. tax purposes, and the notes are generally subject to FATCA and ERISA-related investment constraints for certain plans.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering medium-term autocallable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to Tesla, Inc. stock. Each unit has a $10 principal amount, with an expected two-year term if the notes are not called early.
Investors may receive quarterly contingent coupons between $0.325 and $0.35 per unit (a 13.00%–14.00% annualized rate) only when Tesla’s stock is at or above 50% of its starting value on the observation dates, with a memory feature that can make up missed coupons later.
The notes can be automatically called semi-annually if Tesla’s share price is at or above the starting value, returning principal plus the due coupon and ending the investment. If not called and Tesla has fallen more than 50% at maturity, repayment is reduced 1-to-1, putting up to 100% of principal at risk. The estimated initial value is between $9.25 and $9.55 per $10, below the public price, and secondary market liquidity is expected to be limited. All payments depend on the credit of GS Finance Corp. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering autocallable notes linked to the State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), maturing in 2031. The notes pay no interest and repayment depends on SPY’s performance.
The notes may be automatically called in March 2027 if SPY is at or above its initial level, in which case investors receive $1,137 per $1,000 face amount. If not called, principal is protected only down to a 10% buffer; below 90% of the initial level at maturity, losses increase one-for-one with further declines.
The pricing supplement highlights that the model-based estimated value on the trade date is lower than the issue price, that secondary market values may be volatile and illiquid, and that investors face full issuer and guarantor credit risk. It also explains complex and uncertain U.S. tax treatment, including potential application of Section 1260 constructive ownership rules and FATCA withholding.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering buffered notes linked to the S&P 500® Index that pay no interest and are scheduled to mature on March 7, 2029. Your return depends entirely on the index level on a single determination date near maturity.
At maturity, for each $1,000, you receive $1,000 plus 95.5% of any positive index gain. If the index is flat or down by up to 30%, you still receive $1,000, so modest declines are absorbed by a buffer. If the index is down more than 30%, your payoff falls one‑for‑one with the index loss, and you can lose your entire investment.
The notes are unsecured obligations of GS Finance Corp. and subject to the credit risk of both the issuer and the guarantor. The bank estimates the initial economic value at between $925 and $965 per $1,000, below the 100% issue price, reflecting fees, hedging costs and dealer margins. Liquidity is not assured, and secondary prices may be volatile and sensitive to rates, volatility and credit spreads.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. executive John F.W. Rogers, an Executive Vice President, reported a series of open-market sales of the company’s common stock on February 11, 2026. The trades involved multiple small blocks of shares sold at prices generally between $950 and $968 per share.
After these sales, Rogers directly held 39,007 shares of Goldman Sachs common stock. Additional shares were held indirectly: 9,428 shares by his spouse and 38,165 shares through a trust whose sole trustee is his spouse and whose beneficiaries are immediate family members, for which he disclaims beneficial ownership.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is offering callable contingent coupon index-linked notes due February 27, 2029. The notes are tied to the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices, and pay a monthly coupon of $6.917 per $1,000 (0.6917% monthly, up to about 8.3% per year) only if each index stays at or above 70% of its initial level on the relevant observation date.
At maturity, if the notes have not been redeemed and every index finishes at or above its 70% trigger buffer level, holders receive $1,000 per note plus any final coupon. If any index ends below its trigger buffer, repayment is reduced in line with the worst index’s loss, and principal can fall to zero. The issuer may redeem the notes at par, plus any due coupon, on monthly coupon dates from August 2026 through January 2029. The supplement highlights credit risk to both GS Finance Corp. and its parent, potential lack of secondary market liquidity, and tax uncertainty around this pre-paid derivative structure.
GS Finance Corp., guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., is issuing index-linked medium-term notes with an aggregate face amount of $7,912,000. The notes pay a contingent monthly coupon of $8.542 per $1,000 (0.8542% monthly, about 10.25% per year) only if on each observation date all three underliers — the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices — are at or above 70% of their initial levels.
The notes can be automatically called on scheduled dates if each index is at or above its initial level, returning $1,000 per note plus any due coupon. If not called, payment at maturity depends on the worst-performing index: investors receive full principal back only if every index finishes at or above 60% of its initial level. If any index ends below this 60% trigger buffer, principal is reduced in line with the worst index’s loss and investors can lose up to their entire investment. The notes are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of GS Finance Corp. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., and may have limited liquidity and complex tax treatment.