Financial Results
Pre-Tax Income Slipped At Morgan Stanley In Q2
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The US firm said its expense efficiency ratio was 74 per cent, affected by $200 million related to a specific regulatory matter concerning the use of unapproved personal devices and the firm’s recordkeeping requirements.
Pre-tax income at Morgan Stanley fell
to $3.319 billion in the second quarter of 2022 from $4.566
billion a year ago, as net revenues fell and non-compensation
costs rose, the US firm has reported.
Net revenues fell to $13.132 billion from $14.759 billion;
non-compensation expenses rose to $4.162 billion from $3.697
billion, it said in a statement.
The cost/income ratio rose to 74 per cent from 69 per cent over
the year. The Wall Street firm said it had a standardized Common
Equity Tier 1 capital ratio – a standard international yardstick
of a bank’s capital buffer – of 15.2 per cent.
Within the wealth management business, this division delivered a
pre-tax margin of 26.5 per cent or 28.2 per cent when integration
costs are taken out. Net revenues were $5.7 billion, negatively
impacted by mark-to-market losses on investments associated with
certain employee deferred compensation plans. The business added
net new assets of $53 billion in the quarter and $195 billion in
the first half of 2022. The quarter also saw continued growth in
bank lending and $29 billion of fee-based flows.
“Overall the firm delivered a solid quarter in what was a
more volatile market environment than we have seen for some time.
Strong results in equity and fixed income helped partially
counter weaker investment banking activity. We continue to
attract positive flows across our wealth management business, and
investment management continues to benefit from its
diversification. Finally, we finished the quarter in a
strong capital position to ensure we move forward with
confidence," James Gorman, chairman and chief executive,
said.