Goldman Sachs Group Inc is buying GE Capital Bank's US online deposits, a move that will give the largest US investment bank a more stable source of funding to help it better weather future crises.
The deal is relatively small, giving Goldman Sachs $16 billion of deposits to help fund its $860 billion of assets. But it represents the latest step in a historic shift for Goldman, a standalone investment bank that has been forced by regulators to look more like a universal bank since the financial crisis.
Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns faltered in 2008 after they could no longer borrow from bond investors and in other markets. Regulators have been pushing investment banks since then to mimic commercial and universal banks and fund more of their assets with deposits from consumers. In times of stress, deposits are less likely to disappear because they are federally insured.
Some officials at the Federal Reserve, for example, pressured Goldman Sachs to acquire retail bank Wachovia soon after Lehman's collapse.
Goldman Sachs considered buying online bank ING Direct, but Capital One Financial Corp bought it instead in 2011, according to a person familiar with the bank's plans.
At the end of June, Goldman's deposits stood at $89 billion. Terms for the deal were not disclosed.
The bank long avoided targeting consumers as customers, but has lately been rethinking that position. It is starting up a new online consumer lending business, and hired Discover Financial Services executive Harit Talwar to help develop it. People close to the bank said its decision to buy the GE Deposits was independent to its consumer lending business.
For General Electric Co the deal comes days after it agreed to sell its health care finance business to Capital One.
GE has been winding down its financing arm, GE Capital, which at one point accounted for almost half of the company's profit. The unit's rising funding costs during the 2008 financial crisis nearly sank the entire company.
After GE Capital Bank sells its deposit platform, it will wind down its remaining operations, the company said in a statement.
GE Capital has another bank that is chartered in the United States, Synchrony Bank, which is owned by Synchrony Financial, the credit card unit of GE Capital. Synchrony Financial sold shares publicly last year, and is due to wholly split off from GE later this year in a share exchange.
GE hopes that shedding its two banks chartered in the United States will reduce its regulatory burden.
Closing of the deal with Goldman Sachs, as well as splitting off the rest of Synchrony, are subject to regulatory approval.
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