(Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group
Inc.<https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=GS%3AUS>racked up
trading profits for itself every day last quarter. Clients who
followed the firm’s investment advice fared far worse. Seven of the
investment bank’s nine “recommended top trades for 2010” have been money
losers for investors who adopted the New York-based firm’s advice, according
to data compiled by Bloomberg from a Goldman Sachs research note sent
yesterday. Clients who used the tips lost 14 percent buying the Polish zloty
versus the Japanese yen, 9.4 percent buying Chinese stocks in Hong Kong and
9.8 percent trading the British pound against the New Zealand dollar.
The struggles for analysts at Goldman Sachs, which is fighting a fraud
lawsuit from U.S. regulators who accuse the company of misleading investors
in a mortgage-linked security, show the difficulty of predicting market
movements as widening budget deficits, a fragile global economic recovery
and tighter financial regulations increase volatility. Stock and currency
fluctuations rose to the highest in a year this month as Europe pledged
about $1 trillion to stop a debt crisis in the region.
“This says that Goldman’s guys are only human,” said Axel
Merk<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Axel%0AMerk&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>,
who oversees $500 million as president and chief investment officer of Merk
Investments LLC in Palo Alto, California. “No one is always right. There are
a lot of cross currents in this market.”
Gia 
Moron<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Gia+Moron&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>,
a spokeswoman for Goldman Sachs, declined to comment.
China’s Bear Market
Goldman Sachs’s trading profits come from capturing bid- offer spreads when
its traders act as intermediaries for clients, Gary
Cohn<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Gary+Cohn&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>,
the firm’s president and chief operating officer, said last week in New
York. Proprietary trading isn’t a main driver of earnings, he said.
The trade advice for customers is distributed by Goldman Sachs’s global
markets economic research group. It tracks the performance of the trades in
a daily research note. The time period of the recommendations is 12 months.
The performance this year is a reversal from 2009, when nine of Goldman
Sachs’s 11 trading recommendations made money. Investors saw a 22 percent
return <https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=SHCOMP%3AIND> owning
Chinese stocks and a 12 percent gain buying the British pound versus the
dollar, according to a Goldman Sachs note on Dec. 1.
Goldman Sachs analysts made eight trade recommendations for this year in
December, including telling clients to buy the British pound against the New
Zealand dollar. On April 1, Goldman Sachs added a ninth “top” trade, telling
clients to buy Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong and predicting the Hang
Seng China Enterprises
Index<https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=HSCEI%3AIND>would rise
19 percent to 15,000.
Tough Analysis
Since then, the gauge has slid 9.4 percent to 11,426.18. The Shanghai
Composite index has entered a bear market, losing about 21 percent this
year. That’s the third biggest decline in the world after Greece and Cyprus.
The decline accelerated this month on concern Greece, Spain and Portugal
will struggle to finance their budget deficits and dismantle the euro.
The Chinese stock recommendation was made by a group led by Dominic
Wilson<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Dominic+Wilson&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>,
a senior Goldman Sachs economist in New York. Wilson cited inexpensive
valuations and “robust” economic growth. He also said investors have already
factored in the risk of higher interest rates in China.
Wilson wasn’t available to comment because he was out of the office
traveling, according to an e-mail.
Exit Calls
“Emerging markets appear superior to the developed world, but the market
isn’t trading that relationship,” said Eric
Fine<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Eric%0AFine&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>,
who manages Van Eck Associates Corp.’s G-175 Strategies emerging-market
hedge fund. “It may be that some assets are mispriced, but if the market
starts to discount the end point of the game, such as the collapse of the
euro, it’s not that mispriced.”
Analysts at Goldman Sachs recommended investors exit two trades in February,
one involving interest-rate swap rates in the U.K. and another advising
clients to buy credit-default swaps in Spain and sell similar contracts in
Ireland. The first trade had a potential loss of 24 basis points and the
other had a return of 2.9 percent, according to figures issued in the
appendix of the research note in February.
Owning currencies that are tied to growth is the only remaining trade that
has increased in value this year, according to Goldman Sachs. The Goldman
Sachs FX Growth
Index<https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=GSCUGROW%3AIND>has
climbed 3.4 percent since the firm made the recommendation in
December.
Betting on Markets
Goldman Sachs makes more money from trading than any other Wall Street firm.
In the first quarter, the bank’s $7.39 billion in
revenue<https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=GS%3AUS>from trading
fixed-income, currencies and commodities dwarfed the $5.52
billion made by its closest rival, Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of
America Corp. <https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=BAC%3AUS> In
equities, Goldman Sachs’s $2.35 billion in revenue was about 50 percent
higher than its nearest competitor.
Cohn<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Cohn&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>told
investors at a May 11 conference in New York that the firm lost money
on only 11 days in the last 12 months. He said that uncanny streak of
success refutes suspicions that the bank depends on proprietary bets with
its own money.
“It is implausible that a proprietary-driven business model could be right
96 percent of the time,” Cohn said. Instead, he said the “simple answer” is
that the firm makes money by capturing bid-offer spreads when acting as an
intermediary for client trades.
Goldman Sachs executives have grappled before with questions about whether
they’re better at making money for the
firm<https://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=GS%3AUS>than for their
clients, according to an internal e-mail dated Sept. 26,
2007, that was released by a U.S. Senate subcommittee last month.
U.S. Lawsuit
The e-mail to Chief Executive Officer Lloyd
Blankfein<http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Lloyd+Blankfein&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>from
Peter Kraus, who was then co-head of the company’s investment-
management division, explains that individual investors, unlike
institutional clients, occasionally make “comments like ur good at making
money for urself but not us.”
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed a lawsuit against Goldman
on April 16 accusing the company of misleading investors in a
mortgage-linked asset. Goldman denies those allegations and said it will
fight the charges.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aF5tV7uvY0FU&pos=4

-- 


--
Posted By FinPower to FinPower-"For Your Financial
Power"<http://finpower.blogspot.com/2010/05/goldman-sachs-hands-clients-losses-as.html>at
5/19/2010 05:00:00 AM



-- 
Thanks & Regards
Team FinPower

http://finpower.blogspot.com

Group:[email protected] <group%[email protected]>

Yahoo Id:- finpower

FaceBook:-http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/pages/FinPower/316009055309

Twitter:-http://twitter.com/FinPowerin

SMS update:- Join FinPower 567678

HelpLine: +91 93753 66066

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""GLOBAL SPECULATORS"" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/globalspeculators?hl=en.

Reply via email to