Partnership aims to bring alternative investments to retirement savers and wealthy clients
Goldman Sachs Group (GS) is making a rare move in the asset management industry, committing up to $1 billion to T. Rowe Price Group (TROW) as part of a new partnership designed to expand access to private-market investments. The Wall Street bank will purchase as much as 3.5% of T. Rowe’s stock through open-market transactions, potentially becoming one of the Baltimore-based firm’s largest shareholders.
The alliance, announced Tuesday, underscores how traditional asset managers and investment banks are racing to capture new revenue streams as demand grows for private equity, credit, and infrastructure products. With institutional fundraising slowing, the industry is increasingly targeting retail investors and retirement savers.
A Strategic Signal
T. Rowe’s Chief Executive Officer Rob Sharps emphasized that the equity stake was critical for signaling Goldman’s long-term commitment. “It creates alignment,” he said, noting that the move represents confidence in T. Rowe’s turnaround efforts after years of client withdrawals. Shares of T. Rowe rose 4.6% in early trading following the news.
For Goldman, this is its only direct investment in an outside asset manager — a notable step for a firm that has historically focused on its own platforms. Marc Nachmann, Goldman’s head of asset and wealth management, said he was unconcerned about T. Rowe’s $200 billion in outflows over the past five years, describing the collaboration as “unusually broad.”
Shifting Market Dynamics
The partnership arrives at a critical moment. T. Rowe has struggled since 2022, when steep declines in stock and bond markets hurt performance and spurred outflows from its actively managed funds. Meanwhile, investors have flocked to low-cost index funds and ETFs, leaving active managers searching for fresh opportunities.
By leaning into private assets, T. Rowe follows peers who are repositioning themselves in the rapidly expanding alternatives market. Blackstone, Vanguard, Apollo, and BlackRock have all forged alliances or executed acquisitions worth billions to expand their offerings.
What’s Next
Goldman and T. Rowe plan to launch co-branded retirement funds in mid-2026, blending Oak Hill Advisors’ credit expertise — acquired by T. Rowe in 2021 — with Goldman’s private-market strategies. Additional joint portfolios will be tailored for both high-net-worth clients and mass-affluent investors, spanning private equity, private credit, infrastructure, and hybrid public-private equity approaches.
As competition intensifies, the Goldman–T. Rowe tie-up represents a bold bet that retail investors will increasingly embrace private assets, even with their higher risks and fees, in pursuit of stronger long-term returns.
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