Goldman Sachs Sends a Confident Signal

A dividend is one of the few promises a company cannot quietly fake. Guidance gets walked back Buybacks get paused the moment a quarter turns ugly. But a cash payment wired to shareholders every 90 days is a firm putting real money behind its own story, quarter afte

A dividend is one of the few promises a company cannot quietly fake.

Guidance gets walked back

Buybacks get paused the moment a quarter turns ugly. But a cash payment wired to shareholders every 90 days is a firm putting real money behind its own story, quarter after quarter, with nowhere to hide. That is why the least glamorous line on a bank’s balance sheet often tells you the most.

Every summer, the biggest U.S. banks run the same gauntlet. The Federal Reserve drops them into a hypothetical recession, models the damage, and the ones left standing earn the right to hand capital back to shareholders. In most years, the exercise reads as a formality, and this year, with the market near records and artificial intelligence spending hogging every headline, it barely registered.

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