§A · Dispatch · Landing
Goldman Sachs flies to Toronto on day of Global Progress Action Summit
The investment bank's jet lands in the city as world leaders gather to discuss economic security and global challenges at the high-profile event.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Goldman Sachs
Goldman Sachs
Goldman Sachs dispatched its Gulfstream G650ER, tail number N650WS, from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey to Toronto Pearson International Airport on May 9, 2026. The one-hour flight, departing at 6:36 p.m. UTC and arriving at 7:41 p.m. UTC, cruised at a maximum altitude of 32,025 feet and topped out at 485.6 knots ground speed. For a firm headquartered in New York, the quick hop north signals more than routine travel.
The timing aligns precisely with the 2026 Global Progress Action Summit in Toronto, where political leaders and policy experts convened to tackle pressing issues like economic security and rebuilding trust through shared prosperity, as announced by the Center for American Progress. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivered remarks at 2:00 p.m. local time, joined by figures including former U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly. Such gatherings offer prime terrain for investment bankers to navigate the intersections of policy and markets—though one wonders if the jet's arrival, just after the keynote, caught the tail end of the handshakes.
This Toronto jaunt fits Goldman Sachs' pattern of crisscrossing international hubs for high-stakes engagements, echoing its recurring flights to London, San Francisco, Dubai, Hong Kong, Miami, and Washington, D.C. Recent itineraries show the fleet shuttling executives across U.S. hotspots like Los Angeles and Las Vegas earlier in the week, underscoring a relentless pace amid global economic flux. In finance's rarefied air, every summit is a potential dealmaker.
Aboard the Gulfstream G650ER


The aircraft
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