Goldman Sachs CEO sends blunt message to stock market investors
David Solomon was asked about market conditions at the Economic Club of New York on June 2. He paused before answering, then told the room he knew what he was about to say would get quoted.
What followed was one of the most direct assessments of investor psychology any major bank CEO has offered publicly this year, and it arrived at a moment when the AI capital- raising wave is producing deals on a scale Wall Street has never seen before.
What Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said, and what triggered it
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon told CNBC's Leslie Picker that markets are currently driven more by appetite for returns than by concern about risk. "We are definitely in a moment where there's more greed than there is fear," he said. "That's one of the reasons why people that need this capital are coming to the markets, because the capital is available," according to Bloomberg.
The immediate context was Alphabet's $80 billion equity raise, the largest follow-on equity deal ever completed. Solomon described it as the first concrete data point to demonstrate that the market can absorb AI-related capital raises at that very large scale.
"This is the first actual concrete data point for bringing something of this scale, and it's encouraging," he said. "There's also unprecedented wealth and liquidity in the markets to absorb some of this," according to Investing.com.
Solomon also added a direct message to companies considering raising capital right now. "When capital's available, if you're capital consumptive and it's available, take the capital," he said.
"The capital is available," he added.
Why Solomon's greed warning is more nuanced than the headline suggests
The "more greed than fear" comment has circulated widely, but the full context of Solomon's remarks is more carefully calibrated than the phrase alone implies. He did not say markets were in a bubble or that a correction was coming. He said greed does not inevitably turn into a crisis.
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"Greed can turn into fear very quickly, but that doesn't mean it will," Solomon said. "Exuberance can go on for big periods of time. There's a good chance that we're earlier in the cycle than later," according to Banking Dive.
That framing matters for investors parsing the statement. Solomon was not predicting a downturn. He was describing a market environment where capital availability is high and companies seeking to raise money are finding receptive conditions.
His observation was as much a description of opportunity as it was a caution about excess.
What the AI capital-raising wave means for Goldman and the stock market
The context behind Solomon's remarks is a wave of AI-related capital market activity that has made Goldman one of the biggest beneficiaries on Wall Street. The bank holds a 29% market share of mergers-and-acquisitions advisory by value in 2026, its largest lead ever at this point in the year.
OpenAI, Anthropic, and SpaceX are all preparing for potential initial public offerings that could value the companies at trillion-dollar levels. Technology firms broadly are circling investors to raise money for data centers and AI infrastructure. That activity is flowing directly through Goldman's advisory and underwriting businesses.
Solomon described a self-reinforcing dynamic that could extend the current cycle further. Early gains from AI companies are generating wealth that gets recycled back into new ventures and fundraising rounds.
"You've got a lot of people that have made a lot of money at a bunch of these companies, and they're going to be" reinvesting, he said, a flywheel effect that could sustain elevated market conditions longer than skeptics expect, according to Investing.com.
Solomon is not alone in flagging greed in the stock market
Solomon was the second major bank CEO in as many weeks to use the language of excess to describe current market conditions. JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon made a similar observation the prior week, describing investor sentiment as exuberant. That two of the most prominent voices in institutional finance are independently reaching for the same vocabulary is worth noting even if neither is predicting an imminent correction.
The question Solomon was raising was not whether AI is a powerful technology. Few serious ranalysts dispute that. The debate is about timing and pricing.
Markets are valuing AI companies based on expectations of future growth that may or may not materialize on the timelines embedded in current stock prices. When the CEO of the firm advising on those deals says he sees more greed than fear, investors are right to register the signal even if they do not interpret it as a sell notice.
Key context on Solomon's remarks and the AI capital markets environment:
- Solomon's comments came one day after Goldman Sachs became the top underwriter for SpaceX's planned IPO; the bank's position in the SpaceX deal gives it a direct financial interest in the market remaining receptive to large-scale AI and technology offerings, according to Banking Dive
- Alphabet's $80 billion equity raise, which Solomon cited as the trigger for his remarks, is the largest follow-on equity deal ever completed; the stock traded up following the announcement, which Solomon described as evidence that markets can absorb AI-related capital raises at unprecedented scale, Bloomberg reported.
- Goldman holds a 29% M&A advisory market share by value in 2026, the bank's largest ever lead at this point in the year; Goldman president John Waldron said the bank has "an almost $300 billion lead in the league table at this point in the year," Bloomberg confirmed
- Solomon noted the current moment has historical precedent: he made a nearly identical "more greed than fear" observation at the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in November 2021, when markets were similarly elevated on pandemic recovery optimism; that period was followed by a sharp correction in 2022, according to Investing.com
- Despite the greed warning, Solomon's broader tone at the Economic Club was constructive; he said AI spending is creating a "virtual flywheel" as early company gains get recycled into taxes and new ventures, and described the liquidity environment as capable of sustaining large-scale capital raises if optimism holds, according to Banking Dive.
What Solomon's message means for stock market investors watching Goldman Sachs
For investors in Goldman Sachs stock specifically, Solomon's remarks describe a business environment that is currently very favorable. Record M&A market share, a pipeline of large AI-related IPOs, and a capital markets environment in which companies are actively seeking to raise money, all translate directly into Goldman's advisory and underwriting revenue. The greed he is describing is, in significant part, Goldman's opportunity.
For the broader market, the message is more ambiguous. Elevated sentiment and available capital are conditions that can support further gains.
They are also conditions that have historically preceded the kind of reset that occurs when expectations collide with reality. Solomon acknowledged both possibilities in the same answer, which is the honest position for a CEO sitting at the center of the current fundraising wave.
The most useful takeaway from Solomon's Economic Club appearance is not that markets are about to fall. It is that the CEO of one of Wall Street's most influential institutions paused, said he knew it would get quoted, and then described the moment as one where greed has the upper hand over fear.
Investors can agree, disagree, or file it alongside Dimon's exuberance comment from the week before. What they probably should not do is ignore it.
Related: JPMorgan doubles down on stock market message for 2026
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This story was originally published June 7, 2026 at 10:33 AM.