Buyer Universe · Acquirer Profile

Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs is a New York-based global investment bank founded in 1869 and listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker GS. The firm operates across investment banking, global markets, asset management, and consumer and wealth management. Its consumer division, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, launched in 2016 and had grown to several billion dollars in loan balances and deposits by 2021. Goldman had been expanding Marcus through organic growth and acquisitions, including the purchase of United Capital in 2019.

1Acquisitions tracked
$2.2BDisclosed value
1Sub-sectors
NYSE: GSListing

What companies has Goldman Sachs acquired?

Every deal resolves to its entry in the Windsor Drake Market Intelligence database, the single source of truth for the figures shown. Each is traceable to the company's own release and, where filed, the SEC filing.

TargetDisclosed valueSub-sectorAnnouncedSources
GreenSky Goldman buys point-of-sale home improvement lender to extend Marcus consumer franchise, later divested to Sixth Street consortium in 2023. $2.2B Lending September 15, 2021 Release
Total disclosed since 2020 $2.2B 1 deal, 1 sub-sector, sourced to company releases

What is Goldman Sachs acquiring now?

The most recent disclosed acquisition tracked is GreenSky (September 15, 2021, Lending). Recent disclosed activity concentrates in Lending.

Active-posture read written from sourced signals only. No unconfirmed speculation appears here.

Figures are disclosed deal values drawn from Goldman Sachs's own releases and, where available, confirmed against SEC filings (EDGAR Form 8-K), each linked at the deal row. Every figure resolves to a single record in the Windsor Drake Market Intelligence database; the profile presents that record, it does not fork it. Where a value cannot be tied to a filing or official release, it does not appear.

This profile reflects the public record. It is the visible layer of the buyer intelligence Windsor Drake maintains for live mandates, where coverage of a buyer extends to unannounced appetite, private acquirers, and direct corporate-development relationships.