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Goldman Sachs Group Inc. was pressed for details on new businesses after an uneven second-quarter performance, a likely preview of challenges incoming chief executive officer David Solomon will face as he leads the Wall Street bank’s overhaul.

The bank on Tuesday confirmed Solomon will take over from Lloyd Blankfein, who has held the position for 12 years, on Oct. 1, ending months of speculation. Solomon is tasked with executing a plan to boost revenue by entering new businesses and refashioning old ones.

The bank has pledged $5 billion more in annual revenue by growing its fledgling consumer bank, squeezing more from businesses like asset management and changing how it approaches trading.

Once considered the most savvy Wall Street trading house, it has suffered because of tougher regulation since the financial crisis of 2007-2009 and low market volatility crimping revenues.

Goldman’s quarterly profit topped analyst estimates, but equities trading was flat and higher fixed-income trading followed a notably weak year-ago period.

Its shares, down 10.6 per cent since the start of the year, were down 1.6 per cent at midday.

In a research note, Wells Fargo analysts attributed the decline to questions about the bank’s shift in focus and noted Solomon’s absence from the earnings call.

Goldman Chief Financial Officer Martin Chavez told analysts on the call that Solomon’s promotion was “all part of the strategy.”

“You’ll see here the emphasis on more recurring fee-based revenue and you’ve seen that in the results. The emphasis on the growth plan, on driving revenue and earnings growth,” he said.

Chavez was also questioned on whether the bank was looking to improve disclosure and transparency for newer businesses.

The bank gave some details on its new consumer lending business, Marcus, for which it has big ambitions, including a planned launch in Britain. Marcus’ loan book currently totals just $3.1 billion compared with rival JP Morgan’s $400 billion consumer loan book.

Chavez was asked why Marcus has yet to offer a banking app at a time when mobile banking is becoming the primary way customers transact.

Analysts also asked why Goldman’s compensation ratio had declined and for details on Goldman’s investing and lending division and planned cash management push.

Second-quarter profit rose 44 per cent to $2.3 billion, or $5.98 per share, compared with $1.6 billion, or $3.95 per share. Analysts’ average estimate was for $4.46 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Analysts suggested investing and lending business and the bank setting aside less money for bonuses fuelled the profit beat.

Goldman said bond trading revenue climbed 45 per cent from an unusually weak year-ago quarter.

In equity trading, Goldman Sachs lagged rivals JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup Inc and Bank of America Corp, all of which reported gains.

Total revenue rose 19 per cent to $9.4 billion, including increases in everything except fees from advising on mergers and acquisitions.

The bank’s compensation ratio, which measures dollars per revenue set aside for pay and benefits, declined to 39 per cent from 41 per cent in the prior and year-ago quarter.

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