NEW YORK, June 6, 2026, 12:11 (EDT)
- Goldman Sachs ended the session on Friday at $1,038.68, losing 4.9%, but the stock is still up about 1.3% from its May 29 close.
- U.S. stock markets were closed on Saturday. Investors are now looking to May inflation numbers June 10 and producer prices June 11.
- JPMorgan climbed 0.5% Friday, while Morgan Stanley lost 2.9%. That left Goldman’s drop steeper than both rivals.
Goldman Sachs shares tumbled $53.30 to close at $1,038.68 on Friday, wrapping up a choppy week after a strong U.S. jobs report stoked fresh fears about higher interest rates. The New York Stock Exchange was shut Saturday; regular trading hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET.
Goldman’s slide is important with the bank at the heart of two big trades this year—a bounce in capital markets and rising demand for large tech IPOs. Higher interest rates threaten deal flow and valuations. But volatility can boost trading revenue. The key units are Global Banking & Markets, and Asset & Wealth Management.
Stocks fell sharply Friday, with the S&P 500 down 2.64%, the Nasdaq slid 4.18%, and the Dow off 1.35%. Selling pressure followed a bigger-than-expected U.S. payrolls number: employers added 172,000 jobs in May, outpacing analyst forecasts, Reuters said.
Goldman’s drop stood out, even as the market stayed soft. Morgan Stanley slid 2.9%. JPMorgan Chase ticked up 0.5%, getting a lift from its broader base.
The week finished with Goldman up about 1.3%. Shares ended at $1,025.56 on May 29, climbed on Monday and Tuesday, dropped on Wednesday, then surged nearly 5% Thursday before losing most of that move Friday.
Friday’s drop looked like a positioning shakeout after a strong rally, according to market strategists. “The dam just broke today,” Carson Group chief market strategist Ryan Detrick told Reuters. Ohsung Kwon, chief equity strategist at Wells Fargo, said traders’ moves were “more about positioning rather than fundamentals.” Reuters
Goldman is set to play a key role in next week’s biggest deal, acting as lead underwriter for SpaceX’s IPO. SpaceX is targeting a $75 billion offering at a $1.75 trillion valuation, according to Reuters. Pricing is scheduled for June 11, with trading to follow a day later.
Banks jockey for position as SpaceX buzz grows. Reuters said JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley held events for clients about the SpaceX listing, and Goldman Sachs put SpaceX model rockets on display in its Manhattan offices. According to Reuters, it was unclear if Goldman ran a similar event for private wealth clients.
Tougher macro catalysts are on deck this week, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics set to release the May Consumer Price Index, or CPI, on Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. ET. The May Producer Price Index, tracking wholesale inflation, is due out Thursday. The Federal Reserve meets June 16-17.
The risk is clear enough. A hot CPI read and higher yields could keep Goldman shares on the back foot, with corporate clients possibly holding back on stock sales or deals. Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid said Thursday the Fed is weighing patience against more hikes, and put inflation “in the three and a half percent range.” Reuters
Deal appetite is also a risk. SpaceX interest has the potential to boost banks linked to the IPO, but a slow start would go against hopes for a capital-markets comeback. Morningstar analysts put SpaceX’s valuation at $780 billion, Reuters said, far below the IPO’s target figure.
Goldman shares aren’t cheap compared to other banks. The stock is trading at around 19 times earnings, based on the price-to-earnings ratio that compares market price to profits. That doesn’t leave much margin if rates, inflation, or the SpaceX deal go the wrong way for the market next week.