Morgan Stanley fixed-income traders completed a clean sweep by Wall Street banks, surpassing analysts’ estimates and joining the rest of the industry in staging a roaring comeback.
Shares surged after Morgan Stanley joined rivals in reporting a massive surge in bond-trading revenue and boosted its profit target for the next two years. Fixed-income trading revenue more than doubled, helping lift annual profit to an all-time high. The firm also beat analysts’ estimates for merger advice and stock and debt underwriting.
The final three months of 2019 offered relief for banks stung by a years-long slump in the fixed-income market. Investors had been expecting a rebound from 2018’s especially terrible fourth quarter, and the big banks delivered. At Morgan Stanley, the figure advanced 126% to $1.27 billion. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had predicted a 67% rebound.
“Typically in the fourth quarter you see a slowdown after Thanksgiving, and we didn’t see that,” Chief Financial Officer Jonathan Pruzan said in an interview. “We are entering 2020 with a pretty constructive market backdrop and a healthy pipeline.”
The bank said it aims to earn a return on tangible common equity of 13% to 15% in the next two years, and 15% to 17% over the longer term. The firm had an 11.5% to 14.5% goal over the past two years.
Shares of the company, which jumped 29% last year, advanced 5.9% to $56.05 at 8:33 a.m. in early New York trading. That’s the highest level since March 2018.
Morgan Stanley, the world’s biggest stock-trading firm, said revenue from that business was $1.92 billion, slightly below analysts’ estimates.
“The equity number of flat year-over-year is a disappointment (this is their core franchise),” Adam Crisafulli, an analyst at Vital Knowledge Media, said. “The huge 125% FICC growth will probably receive a lot of scrutiny about how sustainable that run rate is.”
Investment-banking revenue increased 11% to $1.58 billion on the strength of its underwriting business. Analysts had been expecting declines for the deal-advisory unit and gains for underwriting.
“Firm-wide revenues were over $10 billion for the fourth consecutive quarter, resulting in record full year revenues and net income,” Chief Executive Officer James Gorman said in a statement Thursday.
Wealth-management revenue surpassed expectations with an 11% gain to $4.58 billion. The firm leans on managing money for wealthy individuals and clients for more than half its revenue.
Under Gorman, Morgan Stanley made expanding in wealth management its top priority in the years following the financial crisis. Some analysts now say that business has matured, meaning the trigger for more gains for the firm hinges on trading and other capital-market activity.
Other Key Results:
- Fourth-quarter net income jumped 46% to $2.24 billion, or $1.30 a share. Excluding a tax benefit, profit was $1.20, beating the $1.02 estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.
- Revenue for the year increased 3% to $41.4 billion.
- Client assets rose 17% from a year earlier to $2.7 trillion.
- Investment-management revenue almost doubled to $1.36 billion, driven by gains in one of the firm’s Asian private equity funds.
This article was provided by Bloomberg News.