Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Morgan Stanley logs record profit

Investment bank’s gain $2.67B in 1st quarter, revenue $11B

- SONALI BASAK BLOOMBERG NEWS

Morgan Stanley on Wednesday posted a surprise jump in fixed-income trading for the first quarter, which combined with better-than-expected equities results helped push revenue above $11 billion for the first time.

First-quarter profit, helped by corporate tax cuts, also rose to an all-time high.

The New York investment bank reported a profit of $2.67 billion, or $1.45 per share, compared with a profit of $1.93 billion, or $1 a share, in the same period a year earlier. Analysts expected Morgan Stanley to earn $1.26 per share, according to FactSet.

Total net revenue was $11.1 billion in the quarter, a record, up from $9.7 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Chief Executive Officer James Gorman has overseen a recovery in his firm’s bondtradin­g business even as the industry suffered in recent years from calm markets that cut demand for fixed-income services. Now, rising rates and political uncertaint­ies offer a chance for the unit, led by Sam Kellie-Smith, to boost revenue and catch up to its stock-trading business, which is the world’s biggest.

Wealth management is a business that Gorman has been emphasizin­g for years now, since it tends to be a more steady business than the choppy, market-impacted parts of the industry.

“The beat came from almost every revenue line item but was largely driven by sales and trading,” Chris Kotowski, a bank analyst at Oppenheime­r & Co., wrote in a note to clients. He described the bank’s results as “firing on all cylinders.”

Shares of the company, which gained 1.5 percent this year through Tuesday, rose 2 cents to close Wednesday at $54.65. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Morgan Stanley’s biggest shareholde­r, said in a separate statement it would sell shares back to the bank to keep its ownership interest below 24.9 percent, the

level it agreed to when the alliance began in 2008.

The bank credited securitize­d products and foreignexc­hange for driving the fixedincom­e trading division’s performanc­e.

“Debate around the direction of rates and speed of rates led to more volatility,” Chief Financial Officer Jonathan Pruzan said in an interview.

Morgan Stanley experience­d “a little bit of a slowdown in the second half of the quarter as some of the dialogue shifted to geopolitic­al risk and trade wars and the domestic political headlines,” Pruzan said. “Seasonalit­y is going to play a part here, so I don’t think all these results are sustainabl­e across all of the quarters.”

Morgan Stanley used electronic systems to grab the stock-trading business of quantitati­ve hedge funds that have increased assets in recent years. Morgan Stanley President Colm Kelleher said he wants to do the same for bonds.

Investment-banking revenue climbed 7 percent to $1.51 billion, better than the 1.4 percent slump that analysts expected, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The New York-based bank was the No. 1 adviser so far this year on mergers and acquisitio­ns, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

 ?? Bloomberg News/CHRISTOPHE­R LEE ?? People walk recently near the Morgan Stanley headquarte­rs in New York City. A company official says seasonalit­y played a role in the bank’s first quarter profits.
Bloomberg News/CHRISTOPHE­R LEE People walk recently near the Morgan Stanley headquarte­rs in New York City. A company official says seasonalit­y played a role in the bank’s first quarter profits.

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