Morgan Stanley Earnings: Cut This Banking Giant Some Slack
Earnings season is underway, and as usual, Wall Street is kicking off the season with the largest U.S. banks among the first to report. Among the notable names is industry giant Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), which just reported its fourth-quarter and full-year 2023 financial results this morning.
Expectations are high, especially with rival banker Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) posting an eye-popping 51% year-over-year earnings gain in the fourth quarter. Thatâs a tough standard for Morgan Stanley to live up to, but perhaps investors shouldnât obsess over comparisons.
Instead, consider each reporting company as a separate, unique business with its own challenges and growth story. In Morgan Stanleyâs case, the challenges are identifiable and hopefully temporary in nature.
A banking metric to watch
Hereâs a financial metric you might not be familiar with, but itâs important in assessing the quarterly and annual performance of the major U.S. banks. Itâs known as ROTCE, which stands for return on average tangible common shareholdersâ equity.
According to Goldman Sachs, ROTCE is âcomputed by dividing annualized net earnings applicable to common shareholders by average monthly tangible common shareholdersâ equity.â Itâs a commonly used metric in the financial sector to assess a companyâs overall performance, and ideally, a bank should have a ROTCE of 10% or greater.
However, achieving a ROTCE of 10% or higher in 2023 would have been challenging for Morgan Stanley, given the circumstances. As the title of this article suggests, investors should cut the investment bank some slack when evaluating its recent performance.
For one thing, Morgan Stanley is in the midst of a major transition. The companyâs CEO for 13 years, James Gorman, stepped down; his replacement, Ted Pick, took over the chief executive role on Jan. 1.
âWe begin 2024 with a clear and consistent business strategy and a unified leadership team,â Pick confidently declared.
However, thereâs bound to be some loss of efficiency in a companyâs operations during a CEO change. Thus, investors should take this challenge into account and understand that the CEO transition is a temporary issue.
Furthermore, Morgan Stanley sustained two sizable one-time charges last year. First, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) levied a âspecial assessment of $286 million pre-tax ($218 million post-tax)â on Morgan Stanley. The company also had to pay a âlegal charge related to a specific matter of $249 million pre-tax ($234 million post-tax), which negatively impacted earnings per diluted shares by 28 cents.â
Itâs clever of Morgan Stanley to call it a âlegal charge related to a specific matter,â as the ugly truth is that this was a legal settlement related to alleged block-trading fraud. However, this is also a temporary financial setback for Morgan Stanley which I hope wonât be repeated.
Getting back to the topic at hand, Morgan Stanley reported an ROTCE of 8.4% for the fourth quarter and better yet, 12.8% for full-year 2023.
As Pick summed it up, âIn 2023, the firm reported a solid ROTCE against a mixed market backdrop and a number of headwinds.â
Presumably, the âmixed market backdropâ included high interest rates and the banking crisis of March and April 2023, which caused lesser competitors like First Republic Bank and Silicon Valley Bank to implode.
MS stock: A good value if it falls further
The marketâs immediate response today to Morgan Stanleyâs fourth-quarter and full-year results was to send MS stock several percentage points lower. However, when you look at the companyâs actual results and put them into context, you might determine that thereâs a good value here.
For Q4 2023, Morgan Stanley reported $12.9 billion in net revenue, versus $12.7 billion in the year-earlier quarter. For the full year, the company generated net revenue of $54.1 billion in 2023, compared with $53.7 billion in 2022. Hence, Morgan Stanleyâs top-line results held steady despite the aforementioned challenges.
Turning to the bottom-line results, Morgan Stanley earned 85 cents per share in Q4 2023, versus $1.26 per share in the year-earlier quarter. I suspect this is what put the market in a bad mood regarding Morgan Stanley. However, bear in mind that this result included the already mentioned one-time charges.
Finally, Morgan Stanley reported full-year 2023 net income of $5.18 per share, versus $6.15 per diluted share in 2022. This shouldnât be too surprising by now, considering Morgan Stanleyâs reduced earnings in the fourth quarter.
I wouldnât exactly call Morgan Stanley âresilient,â but its results from last year werenât terrible, given the special circumstances. If the market continues to react negatively and MS stock drops into the $70s, this could represent a good value for enterprising investors.
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