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Goldman’s $17.2 Billion Quarter and the Brutal Sorting of Everything Else

Stephanie Dugan by Stephanie Dugan
April 13, 2026
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Goldman's $17.2 Billion Quarter and the Brutal Sorting of Everything Else
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Dear readers,

On Saturday we wrote that Tuesday’s bank earnings would reveal whether Wall Street’s fortress institutions see private credit’s distress as contagion risk or market-share opportunity. We didn’t have to wait until Tuesday. Goldman Sachs answered the question this morning—emphatically—and the answer is: opportunity, priced and packaged at industrial scale.

But first, the physical world intervened. US-Iran talks in Islamabad collapsed over the weekend, and by 10:00 AM ET today the White House announced a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude ripped past $103 a barrel. WTI cleared $105. The Strait handles 21% of global oil transit. On Saturday we flagged that Iran had admitted it cannot locate or remove all the naval mines it laid in those waters. The ceasefire math, as we put it, didn’t add up. Now it has unraveled entirely.

Inside Goldman’s trading floors, none of that registered as panic. It registered as revenue.

Goldman Sachs: Volatility as a Business Model

Goldman reported Q1 2026 net revenues of $17.23 billion, up 14% year-over-year, with net income of $5.63 billion. The Global Banking & Markets division posted a record $12.74 billion, powered by surging equities trading and a 48% jump in investment banking fees as corporate boards rush to execute M&A before conditions deteriorate further. The annualized return on equity hit 19.8%.

Read those numbers against Saturday’s newsletter on private credit defaults—the 9.2% default rate in Fitch’s privately monitored portfolio, the 15.8% rate among smaller borrowers, the 18:1 liquidity mismatch choking shadow lenders. Goldman is earning nearly 20 cents on every dollar of equity while the unregulated lending market buckles under floating-rate resets. The divergence between regulated and unregulated finance is no longer theoretical. It is printing in quarterly results.

JPMorgan’s strategy team, led by Mislav Matejka, issued a note today telling investors with a three-month horizon to buy the dip. The S&P 500 closed last week at 6,816.89—2.6% below its all-time high of 7,002. JPMorgan itself reports tomorrow. CEO Jamie Dimon has already warned about America’s $39 trillion debt load and the return of bond vigilantes. Tomorrow we’ll see exactly how much his bank profited from the volatility those warnings describe.

Microsoft’s $72.4 Billion Infrastructure Bet

While banks monetize the present, Big Tech is spending unprecedented sums to build the future—and the market is starting to demand proof of return.

Microsoft poured $34.9 billion into capital expenditures in Q1 of its fiscal year 2026, then followed with a record $37.5 billion in Q2, bringing the first-half total to $72.4 billion. CFO Amy Hood confirmed Azure growth of 39% in Q2 FY2026—38% in constant currency—as the company races to feed the GPU demands of its AI Copilot products.

The physical infrastructure of AI is breathtakingly expensive. Last Thursday, Meta locked in a $21 billion AI cloud commitment with CoreWeave through 2032, pushing Meta’s total commitments to that single infrastructure provider past $35 billion.

The market, however, is ruthlessly separating spending ambition from free cash flow reality. Microsoft’s stock fell roughly 25% in Q1 2026—its worst quarter since 2008—compressing its price-to-earnings ratio to 23, the cheapest valuation in five years. Peter Thiel’s hedge fund, Thiel Macro, quietly liquidated its entire Microsoft and Tesla positions at the end of 2025. On Saturday we noted JPMorgan’s projection that Tesla’s 2026 free cash flow will collapse to negative $5.1 billion. The common thread: Wall Street is repricing every company whose capital intensity outpaces its near-term cash generation.

$103 Oil as a Pricing-Power Filter

Saturday’s newsletter warned that the energy risk premium had not disappeared—it had merely shifted from crude pricing into supply-chain logistics. Today it shifted back into crude pricing, violently.

Energy sector ETFs like the XLE are already up 28% year-to-date. For the rest of the S&P 500, $103 Brent functions as a stress test of corporate pricing power. Companies that can pass surging input costs onto consumers will defend their margins through Q1 earnings calls. Companies that cannot will be exposed. On Saturday we noted that March consumer prices rose 0.9% month-over-month, with energy costs up 10.9%. Today’s blockade announcement layers additional cost pressure onto a consumer already registering record-low sentiment at 47.6 on the Michigan index. The stagflationary setup we described over the weekend just gained another input variable.

Revolution Medicines: A Reminder That Science Still Wins

While the Dow dropped 0.7% at the open on oil fears, Revolution Medicines surged 33%. The reason had nothing to do with geopolitics or interest rates. Phase 3 trial data for a new pancreatic cancer drug showed median overall survival of 13.2 months—nearly double the 6.7 months achieved by standard chemotherapy.

In a market consumed by macro anxiety, RVMD is a clean example of uncorrelated, bottom-up alpha generated by genuine scientific progress. No Fed pivot required.

Bitcoin Fails Its Safe-Haven Audition

The digital gold thesis took another hit today. As US-Iran talks collapsed and crude spiked, Bitcoin didn’t rally—it slid from a weekend high near $74,000 to the $70,500 support level. A recent quantitative study found that oil ETF volatility currently explains 94.6% of Bitcoin’s price volatility, albeit with a time lag. Energy traders priced in Middle East risk back in January; crypto markets are absorbing it now.

Spot ETF inflows remain steady—BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin product pulled in over $612 million last week—but the technical picture requires a decisive break above $76,000 to reverse the structural downtrend. For now, Bitcoin behaves less like gold and more like a leveraged risk asset with an energy-price overlay.

The Takeaway

Saturday we asked whether the mega-banks would treat private credit’s distress as contagion or opportunity. Goldman’s record quarter answers that question for at least one institution. Tomorrow, JPMorgan’s results and the US PPI inflation print will sharpen the picture further. The loan-loss provision commentary we flagged over the weekend remains the critical variable—especially now that a Hormuz blockade has added a fresh layer of energy-driven credit stress to every floating-rate borrower in the system.

Cash flows are sorting the market. Oil is sorting the economy. And earnings season is just getting started.

Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial

Stephanie Dugan

Stephanie Dugan

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