GS Finance Corp. (GSCE) Buffered Digital S&P 500 notes due 2027, capped return
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
424B2
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
GS Finance Corp. (guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.) is offering Buffered Digital S&P 500® Index-Linked Notes due 2027. Each note has a $1,000 face amount and pays no interest. At maturity the cash payment depends on the S&P 500 closing level: if the final level is ≥90% of the initial level you receive a capped maximum settlement amount of at least $1,092.50; if below 90% you incur losses equal to approximately 1.1111% of face value for each 1% decline below the 90% buffer and could lose your entire investment. The notes are unsecured senior debt issued under GS Finance Corp.'s Medium-Term Notes, Series F program and are fully guaranteed by The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Key Figures
Face amount: $1,000
Maximum settlement amount: $1,092.50
Buffer level: 90%
+4 more
7 metrics
Face amount
$1,000
per note face amount used in cash settlement calculations
Maximum settlement amount
$1,092.50
at least $1,092.50 paid if final underlier level ≥ buffer level
Buffer level
90%
90% of the initial underlier level triggers capped outcome vs loss region
Buffer rate
approximately 111.11%
used to scale losses when final underlier < buffer level
Trade date / Issue / Maturity
Trade: April 17, 2026; Issue: April 22, 2026; Maturity: May 5, 2027
timing anchors for initial underlier level, determination date and stated maturity
Underwriting discount
1% of the face amount
distribution concession shown on the pricing supplement cover
Net proceeds to issuer
99% of the face amount
net proceeds after underwriting discount for notes sold initially
Key Terms
Buffer level, Buffer rate, Maximum settlement amount, Pre-paid derivative contract, +2 more
6 terms
Buffer level financial
"Buffer level: 90% of the initial underlier level"
Buffer rate financial
"Buffer rate: the initial underlier level ÷ the buffer level"
Maximum settlement amount financial
"Maximum settlement amount: at least $1,092.50"
Pre-paid derivative contract regulatory
"characterize each note for all tax purposes as a pre-paid derivative contract"
FATCA withholding regulatory
"the notes will generally be subject to the FATCA withholding rules"
Book-entry form market
"The notes will be issued in book-entry form and represented by master note no. 3"
A book-entry form is an electronic record showing ownership of securities instead of a paper certificate; think of it like a bank account ledger that notes who owns shares. It matters to investors because it makes buying, selling and transferring securities faster, safer and cheaper by reducing paperwork, loss or forgery risk, and enabling easier settlement through brokers or a central depository.
Offering Details
structured note (index-linked)
Offering
Offering Type
structured note (index-linked)
FAQ
What do the GSCE Buffered Digital S&P 500 notes pay at maturity?
They pay a cash amount tied to S&P 500 performance. If the final index level is ≥90% of the initial level you receive a capped amount of at least $1,092.50 per $1,000 note; if below 90% losses apply proportionally to the decline.
When do the GSCE notes begin and end (trade, issue and maturity dates)?
Trade date is April 17, 2026; original issue date is April 22, 2026. The determination date is April 30, 2027 and the stated maturity date is May 5, 2027, each subject to adjustment as described in the terms.
What principal protection does the buffer provide for GSCE notes?
The notes have a 10% buffer (buffer level = 90% of initial level). Losses occur only if the final underlier level is below that buffer; losses scale by a buffer rate of approximately 111.11%, which increases the effective loss per 1% decline.
What credit and market risks affect the GSCE notes?
Holders are subject to issuer and guarantor credit risk and market factors. The notes depend on GS Finance Corp. and The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. to pay; market value before maturity is influenced by index level, volatility, dividends, interest rates and issuer creditworthiness.


