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Goldman Sachs BFSI, Investments & Trading Department Salaries in India

based on 1.3k latest salaries
Designation Avg Annual Salary Open Jobs
0 - 6 years exp. (239 salaries)
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₹7.9 L/yr - ₹20.3 L/yr

13 job openings
0 - 5 years exp. (155 salaries)
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₹5.3 L/yr - ₹20.4 L/yr

3 job openings
4 - 9 years exp. (54 salaries)
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₹10.9 L/yr - ₹29 L/yr

1 job opening
0 - 3 years exp. (51 salaries)
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₹3.2 L/yr - ₹7 L/yr

Starting your career? Discover Goldman Sachs fresher salaries in India
0 - 4 years exp. (45 salaries)
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₹9.8 L/yr - ₹38.6 L/yr

1 - 7 years exp. (27 salaries)
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₹12 L/yr - ₹48.9 L/yr

2 - 7 years exp. (23 salaries)
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₹3.2 L/yr - ₹9.6 L/yr

1 - 4 years exp. (17 salaries)
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₹3.5 L/yr - ₹7 L/yr

0 - 3 years exp. (13 salaries)
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₹3.5 L/yr - ₹7 L/yr

3 - 9 years exp. (13 salaries)
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₹6.1 L/yr - ₹19.5 L/yr

4 - 9 years exp. (9 salaries)
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₹6.5 L/yr - ₹22 L/yr

1 - 3 years exp. (9 salaries)
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₹15 L/yr - ₹35 L/yr

0 - 4 years exp. (8 salaries)
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₹3.9 L/yr - ₹10 L/yr

5 - 8 years exp. (6 salaries)
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₹9.2 L/yr - ₹18 L/yr

2 - 4 years exp. (6 salaries)
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₹15 L/yr - ₹40 L/yr

2 - 4 years exp. (5 salaries)
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₹4.7 L/yr - ₹5.8 L/yr

2 - 4 years exp. (5 salaries)
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₹25 L/yr - ₹39.5 L/yr

3 - 5 years exp. (5 salaries)
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₹15 L/yr - ₹20 L/yr

1 job opening
1 - 3 years exp. (5 salaries)
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₹22 L/yr - ₹31 L/yr

0 - 3 years exp. (4 salaries)
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₹5 L/yr - ₹6 L/yr

Last Updated: 21 Jan, 2025

Salary related reviews for Goldman Sachs

3.6

Rated by 263 employees for salary & benefits

Full Time

 · 

BFSI, Investments & Trading Department

3.0
  •  posted on 24 Jun 2024

5.0
 for  Salary and Benefits

Likes

Working among one of the smartest people, branding, salary.

  • Salary - Excellent

Dislikes

The biggest GS problem is that there is no meritocracy. Having worked in IB for more than 15years, I’ve seen tremendous injustices in terms of promotions, pay, and culture. (deleted by the administrator) is now difference.HR tends to recruit mix of brilliant people, which we can divided into 2 categories: - superbly educated and mediocre ones too (mostly with bought MBAs, not even target, expensive ones, as we are seeing many random, non-name candidates).Being superb, CFA , Phd technical is a deep liability because you’re expected to stay quiet and just churn out work. - Administrators, corp. sliders based on bosses liking than skills. Conversely, the people who are incapable of producing quality work are assigned “softer jobs” such as going to meetings, presenting to higher ups, and eventually managing others. Sooner or later all the “smart” people end up reporting to people who don’t understand the business but are good at sucking up to their boss. Those mainly have MBAs, so they aren't experts at all from anything...if you think 1 yrs programme will make you a leader in banking you are irrational, especially without ground knowledge which only qualifications and even masters provides. I don’t have an axe to grind, and actually think this culture has helped my career. In fact it is a great place to learn and grow if you have luck to deal with 1st category! Provided exit opportunities (if you are not too old - age bias) Hedge Funds etc in my case.The common misconception is it is difficult not being sb protégé. Well, I was recruited by direct HR approach last year (typically for +VP grades) However, I can call myself very lucky as HR on-board me although: - I was disciplinary terminated, (deleted by the administrator) in 15’ focusing on the last employer instead, recommendation. Lucky this hasn’t impacted my screening, most banks perform much detailed checks further in history! - I'm 100% non-TARGET (Uni, MBAs, background etc)I have low (3.6/5.0)M.Sc. Marketing/Accounting of Eastern Europe non target even there, 2nd degree- but never finished back at home, started ACCA which failed after 1st exam, same goes to FCA etc. An obvious trick was do buy instead MBA(nb fails those!) the cheapest London’s MBA(100% pass rates+ CMI incl. for free) nb cares, West London at the end my programme which I had to extended, luckly merged with City Uni - what confused HR as it is still same low quality with other slightly better label). Most banks won’t even care about those, somehow GS/Morgan HR’s need tick this off for any promotion, won’t even consider it as any value as you can easily cheat and outsource most assignments to copywriters like most ppl did. Professional qualification in other hand requires sacrifice doing everything all exams by yourself, what was/is challenge for expats not fluent in English. Have you wondered why some EDs having very weak education like me, barely know how to draft an emails and overall suck in communication (now you have an answer) not to mention being threaten by more skilled co-workers? - I don’t have Russel Group (UK)/Ivy business diploma – nothing further from this in fact, as I have graduated mediocre accounting major in one of Easter European uni, not even the most competitive major to start with, this doesn’t make sense hearing about top schools requirements at all. - My background by no means wasn’t FO,as I came from generic op. Firmops,CA experience, never been involved in actually sells pitching, direct clients interaction, not like most transfers to FO coming neither Risk or Research, Finance nor Markets exp - I’m not qualified – neither FCA, FRM, ACCA etc, in fact Analyst, Assoc. I supervise are 2x more technical superb than me, as far my +15 YOE middle/back office operational support goes. I have started ACCA but failed at 1 exam, started FCA but failed, so MBA with impossible to fail(100% successful rate) at West London was my way around, especially as they merged it with City Uni at final study what confused HR even more and giving other label for quality same school instead. - CHEAT TRICK there are MBAs and “MBAs”- I have completed the cheapest (budget limitation and language barrier) non-target (some called it Micky Mouse MBA) London’s MBA as typical those throw in meaningless CMI paper incl in price, both nb really cares but HR needs to tick this off – costed +£16k, which was later luckily merged with City Uni.The main requirement was pass basic IELTS test(some might laugh)not like in professional MBA programmes (GMAT) not to mentioning LSE and rest Russel’s Group requirements! Most of my colleagues @GS have graduated LSE etc (for £110k-140£k eMBA)however due to language, communication I was also forced to use extensive help copywriters(fiverr,gumtee lots of them to choose from) to pass final result. One of advantages MBA over restrict self-study qualification as many people and alumni was doing the same, due to work commitments or just pure laziness etc. MBAs are more restrictive due to their costs not level, as you won’t be banking expert after 1(18mths generic program), of course there are exemptions, not mine. - My communication skills although average at the best, I have never studied English language as my 1st foreign language, nor eastern accent luckily hasn’t impacted my chances. I know it is huge obstacle in other FS sectors at senior level. - Finally if I were representing a different gender, probably not meeting diversity targets (GS it is no surprise aims to influx % women giving us a bit blind eye, I wouldn’t stand a chance among male colleagues, with CFAs, LSEs etc) Overall I’m so grateful and happy that I can lead own team and set own targets as well recruit people suitable for business and my management own personal goals. Policy vs reality and discrimination (own interest above company's) “The firm is committed to providing equal employment opportunity (EEO) to all qualified persons …including race, nationality, gender, religion and age.” Well dead policy, the reality is other way round. So much depends on people. I’m keep telling friends that in this business critical thinking is disadvantageous, there is no space for too old, too experienced candidates as they tend to create leaderships challenges and raising uncomfortable questions about sense and ways of doing things. Craftsmanship speed, accuracy are the most important in this role alongside soft skills managed ( at the end not the most knowledgeable or skilled got promoted!).I personally tend to recruit only young candidates, who are willing to make effort, work long hours and do not challenge supervisors causing unnecessary fractions. Why I would recruit sb you can possess a threat to my role in first place! The biggest GS problem is that there is no meritocracy. Having worked in IB for more than 15years, I’ve seen tremendous injustices in terms of promotions, pay, and culture. (deleted by the administrator) is now difference.HR tends to recruit mix of brilliant people, which we can divided into 2 categories: - superbly educated and mediocre ones too (mostly with bought MBAs, not even target, expensive ones, as we are seeing many random, non-name candidates).Being superb, CFA , Phd technical is a deep liability because you’re expected to stay quiet and just churn out work. - Administrators, corp. sliders based on bosses liking than skills. Conversely, the people who are incapable of producing quality work are assigned “softer jobs” such as going to meetings, presenting to higher ups, and eventually managing others. Sooner or later all the “smart” people end up reporting to people who don’t understand the business but are good at sucking up to their boss. Those mainly have MBAs, so they aren't experts at all from anything...if you think 1 yrs programme will make you a leader in banking you are irrational, especially without ground knowledge which only qualifications and even masters provides. I don’t have an axe to grind, and actually think this culture has helped my career. In fact it is a great place to learn and grow if you have luck to deal with 1st category! Provided exit opportunities (if you are not too old - age bias) Hedge Funds etc in my case.The common misconception is it is difficult not being sb protégé. Well, I was recruited by direct HR approach last year (typically for +VP grades) However, I can call myself very lucky as HR on-board me although: - I was disciplinary terminated, (deleted by the administrator) in 15’ focusing on the last employer instead, recommendation. Lucky this hasn’t impacted my screening, most banks perform much detailed checks further in history! - I'm 100% non-TARGET (Uni, MBAs, background etc)I have low (3.6/5.0)M.Sc. Marketing/Accounting of Eastern Europe non target even there, 2nd degree- but never finished back at home, started ACCA which failed after 1st exam, same goes to FCA etc. An obvious trick was do buy instead MBA(nb fails those!) the cheapest London’s MBA(100% pass rates+ CMI incl. for free) nb cares, West London at the end my programme which I had to extended, luckly merged with City Uni - what confused HR as it is still same low quality with other slightly better label). Most banks won’t even care about those, somehow GS/Morgan HR’s need tick this off for any promotion, won’t even consider it as any value as you can easily cheat and outsource most assignments to copywriters like most ppl did. Professional qualification in other hand requires sacrifice doing everything all exams by yourself, what was/is challenge for expats not fluent in English. Have you wondered why some EDs having very weak education like me, barely know how to draft an emails and overall suck in communication (now you have an answer) not to mention being threaten by more skilled co-workers? - I don’t have Russel Group (UK)/Ivy business diploma – nothing further from this in fact, as I have graduated mediocre accounting major in one of Easter European uni, not even the most competitive major to start with, this doesn’t make sense hearing about top schools requirements at all. - My background by no means wasn’t FO,as I came from generic op. Firmops,CA experience, never been involved in actually sells pitching, direct clients interaction, not like most transfers to FO coming neither Risk or Research, Finance nor Markets exp - I’m not qualified – neither FCA, FRM, ACCA etc, in fact Analyst, Assoc. I supervise are 2x more technical superb than me, as far my +15 YOE middle/back office operational support goes. I have started ACCA but failed at 1 exam, started FCA but failed, so MBA with impossible to fail(100% successful rate) at West London was my way around, especially as they merged it with City Uni at final study what confused HR even more and giving other label for quality same school instead. - CHEAT TRICK there are MBAs and “MBAs”- I have completed the cheapest (budget limitation and language barrier) non-target (some called it Micky Mouse MBA) London’s MBA as typical those throw in meaningless CMI paper incl in price, both nb really cares but HR needs to tick this off – costed +£16k, which was later luckily merged with City Uni.The main requirement was pass basic IELTS test(some might laugh)not like in professional MBA programmes (GMAT) not to mentioning LSE and rest Russel’s Group requirements! Most of my colleagues @GS have graduated LSE etc (for £110k-140£k eMBA)however due to language, communication I was also forced to use extensive help copywriters(fiverr,gumtee lots of them to choose from) to pass final result. One of advantages MBA over restrict self-study qualification as many people and alumni was doing the same, due to work commitments or just pure laziness etc. MBAs are more restrictive due to their costs not level, as you won’t be banking expert after 1(18mths generic program), of course there are exemptions, not mine. - My communication skills although average at the best, I have never studied English language as my 1st foreign language, nor eastern accent luckily hasn’t impacted my chances. I know it is huge obstacle in other FS sectors at senior level. - Finally if I were representing a different gender, probably not meeting diversity targets (GS it is no surprise aims to influx % women giving us a bit blind eye, I wouldn’t stand a chance among male colleagues, with CFAs, LSEs etc) Overall I’m so grateful and happy that I can lead own team and set own targets as well recruit people suitable for business and my management own personal goals. Policy vs reality and discrimination (own interest above company's) “The firm is committed to providing equal employment opportunity (EEO) to all qualified persons …including race, nationality, gender, religion and age.” Well dead policy, the reality is other way round. So much depends on people. I’m keep telling friends that in this business critical thinking is disadvantageous, there is no space for too old, too experienced candidates as they tend to create leaderships challenges and raising uncomfortable questions about sense and ways of doing things. Craftsmanship speed, accuracy are the most important in this role alongside soft skills managed ( at the end not the most knowledgeable or skilled got promoted!).I personally tend to recruit only young candidates, who are willing to make effort, work long hours and do not challenge supervisors causing unnecessary fractions. Why I would recruit sb you can possess a threat to my role in first place! Ethics& Integrity: Neither GS nor my previous bank wouldn’t probably mind if I will admit that I’ve spent few years clamming council social housing benefits as well, living with my further family in their council flat and still work as Director(savings ‘000 in the process, just using loopholes).I simply used an opportunity as I was learnt doing at work and play the game. To summarize I’m not exactly a raw model for junior colleagues (sometimes) better qualified and technically skilled on the job than me, neither in terms of technicality nor especially ethics at all, but as they came to me and once you are in, who cares! All of the above are true and rather simple to check, so I hope HR is taking notes. Morgan's HR acknowledged that if they had known much earlier, they would have responded appropriately, as now…now it is yours and only yours problem, more details resurface with BofA being in loop too. In other words not only geniuses get ED roles but also like my case process masters as I was lucky to work on process in competitive bank they wanted. Only reason why HR so much lowered a threshold for me and fact I'm a women (as Goldman after lawsuit and paying $215m compensation tries so much to get more women into front office roles)

read more
  • Job security - Poor
    +3 more

Full Time

 · 

BFSI, Investments & Trading Department

2.0
  •  posted on 12 Oct 2023

2.0
 for  Salary and Benefits

Likes

...tely not good. It's a myth that Goldman pays bomb. Not at all employee friendly. Overall Goldman performance is poor which is effecting our bonus hike from last 2yrs.pathetic eill never refer any of my friend to join Goldman

read more
  • Skill development - Good

Dislikes

Manager, work life balance, overtime money is very less, hike less, politics.

  • Salary - Poor
    +5 more

Full Time

 · 

BFSI, Investments & Trading Department

3.0
  •  posted on 18 Aug 2023

2.0
 for  Salary and Benefits

Likes

Amazing and talented people around. Steep learning curve. Learn to collaborate and handle stress

  • Skill development - Good

Dislikes

abysmal salary for campus hire, will take you about 5 years to benchmark with your lateral peers. Lot of big names senior management leaving the firm. Hikes were disappointing, have made less than inflation most of the years, the only year the hike was decent was 2021.

read more
  • Salary - Poor
    +2 more

Full Time

 · 

BFSI, Investments & Trading Department

2.0
  •  posted on 06 Jun 2023

3.0
 for  Salary and Benefits

Likes

Offers diverse culture.

Dislikes

1. They pay high salary initially and lock you for a long time. 2. No work life balance need to work for 14 hours daily 3. No benefits or compensation for working long hours. 4.Management and work culture is terrible no job security. 5. Less learning more talking

read more
  • Job security - Bad
    +2 more

Full Time

 · 

BFSI, Investments & Trading Department

4.0
  •  posted on 17 Mar 2023

3.0
 for  Salary and Benefits

Likes

very good in cab facilities and food and new work learning in new tools and technology have lot in Goldman sachs

  • Skill development - Excellent
    +4 more

Dislikes

... employee treat as low Don’t expect work life balance for contract employee And salary are low for contact employee 30% Change u will get permanent 70% better once’s contract close check another jobs Heavy work time in office Daily office No hybrid

read more
  • Work-life balance - Poor
see more salary related reviews

Goldman Sachs Salary FAQs

How much does Goldman Sachs pay per year?
The average Goldman Sachs salary ranges from approximately ₹2.7 Lakhs to ₹3.5 Lakhs per year for a SAP MM Consultant and ₹1.6 Crore to ₹5 Crores per year for a Managing Partner. Salary estimates are based on 1.3k Goldman Sachs salaries received from various employees of Goldman Sachs. Goldman Sachs employees rate the overall salary and benefits package 3.6/5 stars.
What is the highest salary in Goldman Sachs?
The highest-paying job at Goldman Sachs is a Managing Partner with a salary of ₹1.6 Crore to ₹5 Crores per year. The top 10% of employees earn more than ₹41.75 lakhs per year. The top 1% earn more than a whopping ₹92.42 lakhs per year.
What is the minimum salary in Goldman Sachs?
Minimum salary at Goldman Sachs depends on the role you are applying for. For Financial Analyst the minimum salary is ₹2 Lakhs to ₹8.4 Lakhs per year, and for Specialist the minimum salary is ₹3.5 Lakhs to ₹9 Lakhs per year and so on.
What is the salary package for freshers in Goldman Sachs?
The average salary at Goldman Sachs for freshers varies from ₹3.5 Lakhs to ₹4 Lakhs per year for Consumer Analyst and ₹16.4 Lakhs to ₹72.6 Lakhs per year for Investment Banker.
What is the notice period at Goldman Sachs in BFSI, Investments & Trading Department?
According to AmbitionBox, 79% of the Goldman Sachs employees in BFSI, Investments & Trading Department reported a notice period of 1 Month, 15% reported a notice period of 15 days or less and the remaining reported other notice period durations. This is based on 1.1k responses on AmbitionBox in last 2 years.

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Average annual salary in BFSI, Investments & Trading department at Goldman Sachs is INRunlock blur . Salary estimates are based on 1.3k Goldman Sachs latest salaries received from various employees of Goldman Sachs.

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