British investment bank Barclays said on Monday it has appointed former Goldman Sachs banker Paul Johnson as head of equities for Asia Pacific.
By Nupur Anand NEW YORK -Apple is in talks with Barclays to replace Goldman Sachs as the tech giant's credit card partner, said two sources familiar with the matter, as the Wall Street giant steps back from its consumer finance ambitions.
The UK-headquartered bank is proposing to nearly halve the amount of money guaranteed to CEO CS Venkatakrishnan each year while capping his maximum pay package at £14.3m, Sky News can exclusively reveal.
The six-year-long Apple Card partnership between Goldman Sachs and Apple might end sooner than expected. Here's who could take the business.
Barclays Plc hired Paul Johnson from Goldman Sachs Group Inc., as head of equities for Asia-Pacific, part of its three-year plan to boost its equities franchise in the region. Most Read from BloombergHow Sanctuary Cities Are Preparing for Another Showdown With TrumpNYC Commuters Get New Way to Dodge Traffic: $95 Helicopter RidesWhat LA’s Fires Mean for the City’s Housing ShortageDeadly Landslide of Garbage Displays Uganda's Missed OpportunityScaramucci,
Yesterday it was reported that the credit card partnership between Apple and Goldman Sachs may end before the contract between the two companies expires in 2030. Now Reuters reports that Apple is in talks with Barclays as the replacement bank.
Just a day after the Goldman Sachs CEO said that his company's deal to service Apple Card customers may end early, two banks are said to be in active discussions to take over.
Barclays (BCS) hired Paul Johnson from Goldman Sachs Group (GS) as head of equities for Asia-Pacific, Cathy Chan of Bloomberg reports, citing an internal memo. Johnson will drive platforms ...
Barclays raised the firm’s price target on Goldman Sachs (GS) to $760 from $713 and keeps an Overweight rating on the shares following the Q4
Databricks said on Wednesday Meta Platforms had joined as an investor in a $10 billion funding round intended to fuel the data analytics startup's expansion plans and new product development.
Apple is exploring partnerships with Barclays and Synchrony to replace Goldman Sachs as its credit card partner as Goldman scales back its consumer finance ambitions.
The round, which values Databricks at $US62 billion, was led by Temasek, Macquarie Capital and Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund QIA. Meta also joined as a strategic investor.