Goldman Sachs completes Innovator Capital acquisition, lifting ETF assets to $90 billion

By Reuters

April 2, 2026 6:51 AM EDT Updated 9:15 AM EDT

FILE PHOTO: A screen displays the the company logo for Goldman Sachs  on the floor of the NYSE in New York

April 2 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs (GS.N), opens new tab said on Thursday it has completed the acquisition of active exchange-traded fund provider ​Innovator Capital Management, expanding the Wall Street bank’s presence in the ‌fast-growing active ETF segment.

Active ETFs are among the fastest-growing areas of asset management, attracting investors with lower costs and flexible strategies at a time when returns from some passive ​index products have lagged.

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The bank said in December that it would acquire Innovator ​Capital, which managed 171 ETFs with about $31 billion in assets, in ⁠a deal worth about $2 billion.

“With this acquisition, we have taken a transformative ​step in our commitment to provide sophisticated investment solutions that are designed to ​deliver specific outcomes for investors through market cycles,” Goldman Sachs Chief Executive Officer David Solomon said.

Following the deal, Innovator’s co-founders Bruce Bond and John Southard will join Goldman Sachs as ​advisory directors, the firm said, while Chief Investment Officer Graham Day and Head ​of Distribution Trevor Terrell will join as partners.

More than 70 Innovator employees will join the ‌firm, ⁠Goldman Sachs said.

Goldman Sachs Asset Management now oversees about 240 ETFs globally, with total ETF assets under supervision of $90 billion, the firm said.

Innovator uses a so-called defined outcome strategy, employing exchange-traded options to protect investors from market downside while ​capping upside to help ​pay for the ⁠protection.

“What we found is a lot of advisors have clients that are in pre-retirement or in retirement. They are ​prioritizing capital preservation over capital appreciation,” Graham Day told Reuters.

The ​current size ⁠of the defined outcome market is between $70 billion and $80 billion and is growing faster than the traditional ETF space, he said.

“The traditional correlations are breaking down. So ⁠more ​and more investors are looking for different ways ​to get exposure to markets,” said Bryon Lake, Chief Transformation Officer, Goldman Sachs Asset Management.

Reporting by Prakhar ​Srivastava in Bengaluru and Saeed Azhar in New York; Editing by Tasim Zahid

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.


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