Goldman Sachs is in talks to offload its Apple credit card and high-yield savings account products to American Express, a source told CNBC’s Leslie Picker.

Goldman Sachs, Apple and American Express declined to comment.

The talks come amid a broader retreat by Goldman from its largely failed consumer banking initiatives, for which CEO David Solomon has taken a great deal of heat. Last week, CNBC reported that the Wall Street giant is preparing to take a huge writedown on its 2021 acquisition of fintech lender GreenSky.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the Goldman talks with American Express. The newspaper said there’s no assurance of a deal, nor is an agreement close.

It would mark an abrupt reversal for the two corporate giants. In October, the Journal reported Goldman and Apple renewed their partnership through 2029. And in April, Goldman Chief Financial Officer Denis Coleman touted a deepening of the partnership.

“This week, we announced the launch of a savings account for Apple Card users. We are excited to deepen our partnership with Apple through this additional offering and to introduce another source of deposit funding for the firm,” Coleman said at the time.

The Journal also reported Friday that Goldman is talking about unloading its General Motors card partnership. GM declined to comment to CNBC.

– CNBC’s Steve Kovach, Phil LeBeau and Hugh Son contributed to this report.

Source link

You May Also Like

Crypto millionaire received threatening messages in the week before his grisly death: report

WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT A crypto millionaire received threatening messages a week before…

In a Wary Arctic, Norway Starts to See Russian Spies Everywhere

TROMSØ, Norway — In hindsight, some things just didn’t add up about…

Toronto police respond to viral video of officers delivering coffee to anti-Israel protester

Toronto police have responded to a now-viral video showing officers delivering coffee…

Russia unlikely to face criticism at Central Asian meeting

PANAJI, India — Russia is unlikely to face backlash over its war…