Goldman Sachs: The $96 Million Conflict of Interest
Goldman Sachs steered $96 million (enough to pay off roughly 640 average American student loan balances) of investor money to its own affiliate β then let unregistered bankers run the deal anyway.
Source: FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001 | Accepted: August 2025
TL;DR
- Goldman Sachs ran a $700 million IPO (enough to fund 233,000 families’ grocery bills for a full year) while funneling 13.5% of those proceeds β $96 million (roughly what 3,200 median-income Americans earn in their entire working lives) β directly to its own affiliate.
- That arrangement was a textbook conflict of interest under FINRA rules, and Goldman satisfied none of the required safeguards before proceeding.
- Goldman simultaneously permitted four unregistered investment bankers to advise clients on securities offerings for periods ranging from 109 to 171 days β without the legally required licenses.
- The firm knew about the registration problem: its own weekly reports flagged overdue employees, yet Goldman still added them to deal teams and let them work.
- FINRA’s total punishment: a $250,000 fine (less than what Goldman earns in roughly 20 minutes of revenue) and a censure β with no admission of wrongdoing required.
The fine-to-profit math is in “The Cost of a Life” card β and it will make you put your phone down.
The Non-Financial Ledger
What They Actually Sold You
When an ordinary person buys stock in an IPO, they trust the system. They trust that the bank running the deal is working for the offering’s success, not quietly positioning itself to collect a debt on the back end. Goldman Sachs broke that trust in July 2021 when it served as lead underwriter for a $700 million IPO (enough to pay every worker in a mid-sized American city their full year’s salary) while its own affiliate was owed money by the company that would receive the proceeds.
That is the arrangement Goldman set up: Company A raises $700 million from investors. Company A uses the money to buy units from Company B. Company B takes that cash and repays a loan β a loan extended by a Goldman affiliate. The Goldman affiliate pockets $96 million (roughly the combined annual wages of 1,280 average American workers). The investors who bought into that IPO? They funded Goldman’s own debt collection and had no independent watchdog verifying the deal was structured fairly.
FINRA’s rules exist precisely for this scenario. A “qualified independent underwriter” (QIU) is supposed to step in, review the registration documents, and apply the full rigors of due diligence when a lead underwriter has a conflict of interest. Goldman did not bring in a QIU. The regulator’s own document confirms Goldman satisfied none of the three available compliance paths. The firm simply proceeded as if the conflict did not exist.
The Paper Trail They Ignored
The unregistered bankers story is a different kind of betrayal β one of sheer institutional indifference. Goldman’s own internal system generated weekly reports that identified employees with overdue registration requirements. The firm’s policy told new hires they could not perform work requiring registration until they were officially licensed. The firm sent those employees notices saying exactly that. Then the firm added them to deal teams anyway.
Four individuals worked as active members of investment banking deal teams β advising clients on securities offerings, the kind of high-stakes guidance that affects where billions of dollars flow β for periods of 109 to 171 days without holding a single valid registration with FINRA. These were experienced professionals who had previously held Investment Banking Representative credentials within two years of being hired. Re-registering required no new exam. Goldman simply did not follow through on its own paperwork, and nobody escalated the problem because no procedure existed to force escalation.
This is not a story about one overworked compliance officer missing an email. The regulatory document makes clear the failure was structural: Goldman maintained the tracking reports, Goldman acknowledged the overdue registrations, and Goldman still assigned those individuals to client-facing deal work. The supervisory system had a gap large enough to drive a decade of unchecked misconduct through, and Goldman left it open from May 2021 through March 2022 β ten months.
The firm only updated its procedures in March 2022, requiring monthly reviews and escalation protocols. That revision came after FINRA’s examination, not before any internal conscience kicked in. The people who received unlicensed investment banking advice during those ten months had no way of knowing that the professional sitting across the table from them, guiding decisions about their securities offerings, was operating outside the regulatory framework designed to protect them.
Legal Receipts
Straight From the Document β No Spin Added
“A Goldman affiliate served as a lender to Company B and received $96 million from Company B’s repayment using the offering proceeds.” β FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001, Facts and Violative Conduct
“Goldman did not satisfy FINRA Rule 5121(a)(1) because it, as lead underwriter, had a conflict and the securities offered were not investment grade rated and did not have a bona fide public market at the time of the offering. Goldman did not satisfy FINRA Rule 5121(a)(2) because a QIU did not participate in the preparation of the registration statement and prospectus.” β FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001, Facts and Violative Conduct
“From May 2021 through March 2022, Goldman permitted four individuals to perform investment banking activities requiring registration during periods when they were not registered with FINRA in any capacity.” β FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001, Facts and Violative Conduct
“The firm’s weekly reports identified individuals as having overdue registrations, yet the firm permitted them to be added to deal teams and perform investment banking activities requiring registration.” β FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001, Facts and Violative Conduct
“Respondent specifically and voluntarily waives any right to claim an inability to pay, now or at any time after the execution of this AWC, the monetary sanction imposed in this matter.” β FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001, Acceptance and Consent
Societal Impact Mapping
Economic Inequality: The Rules Are For You, Not Them
The single clearest economic reality embedded in this document is the fine-to-offense ratio. Goldman Sachs collected $96 million (enough to cover the full four-year college tuition of roughly 1,920 students at an average public university) for its affiliate through a conflicted IPO. The regulatory penalty for doing so: $250,000 (roughly the price of a studio apartment in lower Manhattan). That is a ratio of 384 to 1. For every dollar Goldman was punished, it collected $384 in benefit from the conflict.
When everyday people commit financial fraud β writing bad checks, failing to disclose assets in a loan application β they face criminal charges, asset seizures, and prison time. Goldman Sachs structured an arrangement that directed 13.5% of a $700 million (enough to build 4,600 affordable housing units) public offering to its own affiliate’s debt repayment, violated three separate FINRA rules doing it, and paid a fine it had to waive its right to contest paying. The settlement even requires Goldman to explicitly acknowledge it cannot claim inability to pay. That clause exists because these firms sometimes try that argument. FINRA had to write it out of the deal in advance.
The investors who bought shares in that July 2021 IPO funded Goldman’s own debt collection without any independent expert verifying the deal was structured in their interest. The qualified independent underwriter rule exists so that when a bank has skin in the game, someone with no conflict stands between the bank and the investor’s money. Goldman removed that protection entirely, raised the money, and sent $96 million (the equivalent of 640 full student loan payoffs or the annual grocery budget of 32,000 families) to itself. No investor who bought that stock had any of this information in plain language before they signed on.
The Licensing Failure: Who Gets To Play By Different Rules
The registration violation compounds the inequality picture. FINRA requires investment banking professionals to be licensed because their advice moves enormous sums of money and directly shapes financial outcomes for clients. Four Goldman employees gave that advice β formally, as members of active deal teams β for as long as 171 days without valid licenses. If a financial advisor at a small regional firm operated without a license for six months while advising clients, the regulatory response would be categorical and swift. At Goldman, it was a line item in a cycle exam report and a $250,000 shared fine covering all violations combined.
The systemic nature of the failure makes the inequality starker. Goldman’s own weekly reports showed the problem. The firm’s own policy said unlicensed employees could not work. The firm sent those employees written notices of the restriction. Then supervisors assigned them to client-facing deal teams anyway β and no escalation mechanism existed to stop it. This is not the chaos of a disorganized small operation. Goldman Sachs has over 7,500 registered representatives and over 30 branches nationwide. The infrastructure to track compliance existed. The institutional will to enforce it, in these cases, did not.
The Cost of a Life Metric
Collected by Goldman’s affiliate from the conflicted IPO proceeds β roughly what 3,200 median-income American workers earn across their entire working lives.
Source: FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001
Total fine Goldman paid for all violations combined β less than the cost of a starter home in most major U.S. cities, and 0.26% of the money it directed to itself.
That is 26 cents of accountability for every $100 of conflict.
The ratio of money Goldman’s affiliate collected to the fine Goldman paid. For context: if you stole $384 from your employer and the punishment was a $1 fine, you would do it again. So would they.
$96,000,000 conflict benefit Γ· $250,000 fine = 384x. All figures from FINRA AWC No. 2022073415001.
What Now?
The People Still Running This
The settlement document identifies the Goldman signatory as Colleen M. O’Brien, Managing Director and Senior Counsel at Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC. The individual executives who approved the conflicted IPO structure, who oversaw the teams containing unlicensed bankers, and who chose not to build escalation procedures into the supervisory system are not named in the public document. The institution accepted the fine. The institution admitted nothing. The people remain in place.
Regulatory Watchlist: Who Has Jurisdiction
- FINRA (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority) β primary securities self-regulator; issued this settlement
- SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) β federal oversight of IPO registration and disclosure requirements
- CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) β broader consumer financial market conduct
- DOJ (Department of Justice) β criminal referral authority if willful fraud is established
- State Securities Regulators β concurrent jurisdiction in states where the IPO was marketed and sold
What You Can Actually Do
Search Goldman Sachs on FINRA BrokerCheck (finra.org/brokercheck) β the settlement document instructs you to do exactly that. This AWC becomes part of Goldman’s permanent disciplinary record, which means future regulators and the public can access it. Every time you pull that record, you make it harder to bury.
Connect with investor protection organizations like Better Markets, Public Citizen’s financial policy team, and Americans for Financial Reform. These groups track exactly this kind of settlement-and-walk-away pattern and push for structural regulatory reform. Local credit unions and community development financial institutions (CDFIs) exist as alternatives to doing business with firms operating under enforcement records like Goldman’s. They keep money in communities instead of routing it through affiliate debt-collection schemes dressed up as IPOs.
The system produced a $250,000 fine (less than the cost of one junior banker’s annual bonus at a firm this size) for a conflict that delivered $96 million (enough to fully fund 1,920 four-year public university educations) to Goldman’s own affiliate. That outcome is not an accident or an anomaly. It is what the system looks like when it is working exactly as designed for the people who designed it. Organizing at the local level, pressuring elected representatives who oversee financial regulators, and choosing where your money sits are all tools that cost Goldman more than $250,000 when used at scale.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
This FINRA case can be found on their website by visiting this following link: https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/fda_documents/2022073415001%20Goldman%20Sachs%20%26%20Co.%20LLC%20CRD%20361%20AWC%20gg%20%282025-1757204395541%29.pdf
Explore by category
Product Safety Violations
When companies sell dangerous goods, consumers pay the price.
View Cases →Financial Fraud & Corruption
Lies, scams, and executive impunity that distort markets.
View Cases →


