Goldman Sells $5.5 Billion of Bonds in Post-Earnings Binge

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. joined rival JPMorgan Chase & Co. in the tapping the US investment-grade market after reporting second-quarter earnings.

Goldman sold $5.5 billion of bonds in two parts, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. The longest portion of the offering, an 11-year security, yields 1.17 percentage point above Treasuries, after initial discussions of around 1.45 percentage point, said the person, who asked not to be identified as the details are private.

Proceeds from offering will be used for general corporate purposes and Goldman is the sole underwriter of the deal, added the person.

Goldman’s trading unit powered a surge in earnings in the second quarter. Both fixed-income and equity traders outpaced analysts’ estimates, while a rebounding capital-markets business helped drive better-than-expected results across much of the company’s Wall Street operations.

Wells Fargo, meanwhile, tapped the US high-grade market with a $2 billion perpetual securities offering a day after it raised €2.75 billion ($3 billion) in the European debt market.

This is the first sale of a preferred stock series by one of the so-called Big Six lenders in the US in almost two months, following a spurt of deals earlier this year when hopes of rate cuts by the Federal Reserve were fading. It’s also Wells Fargo’s first since last summer, when it effectively reopened a market that had remained shut since the regional banking crisis.

The new issue “looks like a net AT1 addition (no refinancing),” CreditSights Inc. analysts Jesse Rosenthal and George Milonopoulos wrote in a Tuesday client note. This refers to the role of preferred shares as a source of Additional Tier 1 capital for US banks, played by contingent convertible bonds in other parts of the world.

Representatives for Goldman didn’t respond to a request for comment. Wells Fargo declined to comment.