Goldman Sachs CEO buys two jets for bank

Bloomberg

For years, there was an allergy inside Goldman Sachs to owning a private corporate jet. Top bankers had access to rides on planes shared with others, but didn’t want to erode their less-than-stellar image on Main Street with the unnecessary extravagance of having their own. Until David Solomon took over.
The bank ordered a pair of Gulfstreams late last year that the firm is waiting to receive. The company ordered a G650ER model and a G280, a spokeswoman for the bank said. The G650ER, the more expensive of the two, typically sells for north of $50 million, can hold up to 19 passengers and is powered by Rolls-Royce engines.
The firm previously incorrectly confirmed to Bloomberg that it ordered two G700 models. It considered buying that model, but the premium plane wouldn’t be ready for a few years, the spokeswoman said.
Moves like the jet purchase have earned Solomon his share of detractors within the firm’s top ranks. Some of them worry that his flashy ways can make him appear out of touch at a time when he is also pushing through a program of austere cost cuts. Just last month, he angered critics — both internally and externally — by announcing he took a 20% pay raise in 2019 to $27.5 million. It was the biggest increase given to the CEO of any big US bank, even though Goldman’s stock price has lagged rivals throughout most of his 18-month tenure.
Private jets are an expected perk at the highest levels of Wall Street, where JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley have had their own for years. And it’s also possible that the use of private jets becomes more accepted in the age of coronavirus because they can mitigate the risk of spreading the disease.

The rapid economic collapse caused by the coronavirus pandemic creates another optics problem for the firm. With unemployment skyrocketing and the death toll mounting, the purchases risk rekindling some of the fury that was directed toward bankers following the 2008 financial crisis, when people took to the streets to protest Wall Street excess.
A spokeswoman for Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said the purchase of the planes would save it money.
“We have long made private aircraft available to senior executives who travel extensively to see clients, and that travel was arranged through a fractional ownership arrangement with NetJets,” Leslie Shribman said. “A detailed analysis demonstrated conclusively that it would be more cost effective to own the aircraft directly.”
Private jets are an expected perk at the highest levels of Wall Street, where JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley have had their own for years. And it’s also possible that the use of private jets becomes more accepted in the age of coronavirus because they can mitigate the risk of spreading the disease.
But Goldman’s purchases have already made some at the firm uncomfortable. Even if the jets do eventually save the firm money, internal critics saw the Gulfstreams as attention grabbers, according to people familiar with their thinking.
The G650, which also comes in an extended-range version that Goldman says it chose, has been in the news recently. WeWork ousted boss Adam Neumann in September and immediately put up for sale the plane it had bought him one year earlier.
Solomon’s raise drew immediate condemnation from the likes of Senator Elizabeth Warren and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers. They criticized the idea of one executive getting so much money at a time of widespread economic pain.
His pay had been set before the pandemic devastated the global economy. Even so, some colleagues have faulted him privately for accepting the raise while asking the rest of the firm to make do with less.
Aircraft are the sort of extravagance that can attract unwanted scrutiny, like in early 2009, when the heads of the biggest U.S. banks were called in to testify before congress on the financial crisis.
At one point, the executives were asked to raise their hand if their company owned or leased a private plane. Lloyd Blankfein, Solomon’s predecessor, was the only one who didn’t.
“Let the record show,” said congressman Brad Sherman, “all the hands went up except for the gentleman from Goldman Sachs.”

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