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Goldman Sachs lands in Nice the week of a terror alert at its Paris office
The bank's G650ER flew a brief hop from Nice to a nearby airfield after U.S. authorities warned of Iranian threats targeting its Paris location.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Goldman Sachs
Goldman Sachs
Goldman Sachs flew its Gulfstream G650ER (tail N650WS) from Nice-Côte d'Azur Airport to a point near 43.660, 7.215 on 19 June 2026, a flight of just eight minutes at a maximum altitude of 2,850 feet. The departure from LFMN came the same week the U.S. issued a security alert to Goldman Sachs's Paris office over threats from an Iranian-linked group, per a report by capwolf.com. French authorities conducted a search at the bank's Avenue Marceau location after a late-night email warned of explosive devices, though no suspicious materials were found.
The threat follows a pattern of heightened risk for American financial institutions in Europe. Goldman Sachs's recent flight history shows a Paris-to-London leg on 18 June and a Washington-to-Paris trip on 17 June, suggesting the bank's European network is active amid the broader Middle East tensions. The bank's CEO David Solomon has noted that global M&A volumes have exceeded $2.6 trillion this year, per Dealogic data, but the immediate concern in Nice appears to be security rather than dealmaking.
Goldman Sachs's fleet includes the G650ER, its long-range workhorse, which typically flies between Teterboro and global financial hubs. This brief hop from Nice to a nearby airfield may reflect a precautionary repositioning after the Paris alert, though the bank has not commented on the flight. The incident underscores how geopolitical risks are reshaping operational routines for major financial firms.
Aboard the Gulfstream G650ER


The aircraft
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