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Sheryl Estrada

Goldman Sachs CEO says clients are shifting away from supply chain resiliency to keeping headcount down, but 'I'm not hearing panic'

David Solomon, CEO, Goldman Sachs, speaks onstage during Los Angeles Team Mentoring Annual Soiree Celebrates 30th Anniversary at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on October 20, 2022 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Lester Cohen/Getty Images for Los Angeles Team Mentoring) (Credit: Lester Cohen—Getty Images for Los Angeles Team Mentoring)

Good morning,

With just over two weeks left in Q4, and an uncertain year ahead, executives at large U.S. banks have been weighing in on inflation, a pending recession, consumer spending, and the tight labor market.

"Economic growth is slowing," Goldman Sachs CEO David M. Solomon said on Tuesday, the first day of the firm’s U.S. Financial Services Conference. “Our economists expect the global economy to grow by 1.9% in 2023,” Solomon said. “They believe Europe is already in the midst of a mild recession.” And Goldman economists predict the U.S. will narrowly avert a recession, he said. 

“I'm actually slightly more cautious when I talk to clients,” Solomon said. “They sound extremely cautious. Many CEOs are watching the data, waiting to see what happens…But I'm not hearing panic.”

But Solomon did indicate a change. “We're seeing clients shift attention away from supply chain resiliency and toward keeping headcount down.” That’s evident in what seems like almost daily announcements of hiring freezes or layoffs by companies across industries.

The largest cost for Goldman Sachs is “our people,” Solomon said. “The job market remains surprisingly tight and the competition for our talent, particularly top talent, is as strong as ever.” The firm will continue to seek to balance, and “appropriate pay for performance mindset with a focus on talent retention at this time,” he said.

Pay for performance usually includes bonuses, which will shrink for Wall Street bankers, according to a recent report by Johnson Associates. The compensation management consulting firm projects that for investment bankers, incentive pay may drop by as much as 45% compared to last year

Goldman's latest restructuring included combining the bank’s wealth management and asset divisions into a single unit, and merging its investment banking and trading businesses into another. 

“The labor market is still super tight, no matter how you measure it, obviously,” Marianne Lake, co-CEO of consumer and community banking at JPMorgan Chase, said during the conference. “But it does feel like we're past the peak of wage inflation,” said Lake, who is a former CFO at JPMorgan. “It feels like the sort of frenzy on hiring and the super elevated attrition rates, for us, and generally, have abated a bit. So we look for that to soften into 2023.” The outlook on unemployment is that it will move higher in 2023 peaking in 2024, slightly about 5%, Lake said. 

The U.S. economy is still strong, she said. But the outlook is for a “shallow and short-lived" recession at the end of next year, Lake said. For JPMorgan, "I think the performance of markets so far this quarter is good, specifically in fixed income," she said.

The glass is half full or half empty

In November, consumer spending was up 5%, Brian Moynihan, chairman and CEO at Bank of America, said during the conference. Compared to previous periods, “The rate of growth and spending is starting to slow,” Moynihan said. That’s the impact of the Fed raising interest rates to get inflation under control, he said.

You can look at it as the glass is half full or half empty metaphor, he said. “Half full is—consumers are still in the game, and half empty is—they're starting to slow down,” he explained. The question then becomes, how soon will the Fed stabilize the economy in order to “avoid more damage?" BofA researchers predict "negative growth" in the first part of next year, but a recession would be "mild,” he said. 

In Q3, big U.S. banks, including Goldman, JPMorgan and BofA, reported weaker profits as the economy slowed and dealmaking was halted by volatile markets.    

Key partnerships 

Amid predictions about the future of the economy at the conference, a CEO took the time to publicly thank his CFO for his service. KeyCorp recently announced Donald R. Kimble, longtime CFO and chief administrative officer, will retire on May 1. 

“I just want to take a moment and acknowledge Don Kimble,” KeyCorp CEO Christopher Gorman said during the company’s panel session. “Don, thank you for your steadfast leadership,” he said to Kimble. “Thank you for all you've done for Key over the last decade.” Gorman then welcomed the next CFO, Clark H.I. Khayat, currently chief strategy officer, who was also in attendance. 

So, while financial services execs continue to navigate the uncertain economy going into next year, CEO and CFO partnership is still key. 


See you tomorrow.

Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com

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