Money - International
Morgan Stanley profit beats estimates on stronger-than-expected trading, M&A
The logo of Morgan Stanley is seen at an office building in Zurich, Switzerland September 22, 2016. u00e2u20acu2022 Reuters pic

NEW YORK, April 14 — Morgan Stanley reported a smaller-than-expected 11 per cent drop in first-quarter profit today as a near doubling in advisory fees from M&As helped cushion the blow from a slump in capital market activity.

The investment banking powerhouse outperformed rival Goldman Sachs in M&A advisory even as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine unsettled equity markets and forced companies to hold off on dealmaking and stock market listings.

Advertising
Advertising

Trading revenue, too, fared better than what some analysts had feared, falling just 6 per cent in the quarter to US$3.98 billion (RM16 billion) from the highs of last year.

Morgan Stanley earned US$258 million in revenue from its equity underwriting business, down sharply from US$1.50 billion a year ago, when it generated handsome fees from a spate of high-profile IPOs.

According to Refinitiv data, equity underwriting deal volumes fell 80 per cent in the first quarter for Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, the two most dominant financial advisers on initial public offerings (IPOs) globally.

The bank also reported a steep decline in fixed income underwriting revenue, hurt by lower bond issuances.

Morgan Stanley’s dealmakers brought in US$944 million in advisory revenues in the quarter, compared with US$480 million a year ago.

But that did little for overall investment banking revenue, which slumped 38 per cent to US$1.76 billion. The unit consists of the bank’s advisory, equity underwriting and fixed income underwriting businesses.

The bank’s profit fell to US$3.54 billion, or US$2.02 per share, in the quarter ended March 31, from US$3.98 billion, or US$2.19 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts, on average, were expecting the bank to report a profit of US$1.68 per share, according to Refinitiv data.

Net revenue fell 6 per cent in the quarter to US$14.8 billion, but beat estimates of US$14.27 billion.

Return on tangible equity, a closely-watched metric for profitability that measures how well a bank is using its capital to produce profit, was 19.8 per cent during the quarter. The figure was well above the bank’s two-year target of between 14 per cent and 16 per cent.

Total expenses fell to US$4.83 billion from US$5.3 billion a year earlier. — Reuters

Related Articles

 

You May Also Like