Morgan Stanley (MS)
Company Information
John J. Mack, CEO/Chairman of the Board/Director
1585 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
US
Map it ![]()
Phone: (212) 761-4000
Fax: (212) 761-0086
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Future of Wall Street: Boring-Banker SyndromeJan 26 2009
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Morgan Stanley's Rough RoadDec 17 2008
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Thanks, HankOct 13 2008
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Weekend at Mack'sOct 10 2008
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We're All Banks NowSep 22 2008
Portfolio.com Overview
Morgan Stanley can never be accused of flying under the radar. The company has four business arms now, but in September 2007 the Discover credit card unit will be spun off into a separate public entity, as C.E.O.
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
The very company that spawned Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, is now a major competitor. It all began in 1934, when J.P. Morgan dropped its investment-banking business to comply with regulations imposed after the 1929 stock market crash. Two of the firm’s leading employees, Henry Morgan and Harold Stanley, seized the opportunity to establish their own investment bank, Morgan Stanley, capitalizing on the corporate relationships they had developed at J.P. Morgan. By the time Morgan Stanley took a seat at the New York Stock Exchange in 1942, it had developed a stellar reputation as a bond issuer. The firm was flying high through the ’80s, securing such high-profile clients as General Electric. In 1997, Morgan Stanley (which had gone public in 1986) merged with brokerage firm Dean Witter and Discover & Co., the financial-services business that Sears had spun off in 1993. Five years later, the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Discover & Co. tongue twister became known simply as Morgan Stanley.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Morgan Stanley started strong—after just one year, the firm was handling $1.1 billion in stock and bond issues—and has a track record of innovation.
In 1964, Morgan Stanley created the world’s first computer model for economic analysis, an application that introduced Wall Street to the massive role technology would soon play and pulled the bank away from the pack. In the ’50s, Morgan Stanley was considered the gold standard for bond issues, handling deals for giants like General Motors, U.S. Steel, and AT&T. During the ’70s, it established the financial industry’s first-ever mergers-and-acquisitions department. In 2000, Morgan Stanley managed Deutsche Telekom’s corporate bond issue, the largest to date: $14.6 billion.
The first Wall Street firm to launch a Chinese-language website (in 1994), Morgan Stanley has always been lauded for its worldliness. This reputation was strengthened in 2006 when the company set up shop in Dubai.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
In 2005, Philip Purcell resigned as C.E.O. under heavy, public pressure from a group of former Morgan Stanley execs known as the Group of Eight. In addition to missing out on blockbuster merger deals with J.P. Morgan, Bank One, and most recently BlackRock, Purcell was blamed for failing to integrate Dean Witter’s retail operations with Morgan Stanley’s investment-banking services. Friction between Purcell and top executives triggered an employee exodus from 2000 to 2005; Mack, president at the time, was among those who fled.
Mack’s departure in 2001 didn’t come as a surprise. In the late ’90s, he had suggested to Purcell that Morgan Stanley merge with Chase Manhattan. Purcell told Mack that J.P. Morgan was a better option, but then missed the boat: In 2000, J.P. Morgan swooped in and purchased Chase Manhattan. Mack said goodbye a year later, when he lost a fight with Purcell over who would head Morgan Stanley; he moved on to become the co-C.E.O. of Credit Suisse First Boston. He went back to Morgan Stanley as C.E.O. in 2005.
By 2005, eight years after the Dean Witter Morgan Stanley merger, the investment bank still accounted for two-thirds of the company’s earnings. The Discover Card business’s outstanding balance had been shrinking since 2002, but record profits for the unit in 2006 finally allowed Mack to go ahead with the long-planned divestiture.
WHAT'S NEXT
Since his return, Mack has been doing everything in his power to undo Purcell’s legacy. He wants to transform Morgan Stanley’s culture by encouraging employees to take risks and jump on deals before it’s too late. Will the company regain its golden reputation? It’s difficult to say. Morgan Stanley has already sent the Discover Card business in another direction. Some analysts predict Mack will eventually cave in and sell the entire firm to J.P. Morgan, a move that would send Morgan Stanley back to the firm from which its founding partners split in 1935. —Jessica Liebman
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Future of Wall Street: Boring-Banker Syndrome
Portfolio.com reports: The crash on Wall Street means major transformation to something far less sexy and risky: simple intermediaries making modest profits.
Jan 26 2009 -
Morgan Stanley's Rough Road
By posting a wider than expected loss, Morgan proves that transforming into a commercial bank in this environment won't be easy.
Dec 17 2008 -
Thanks, Hank
Treasury pledge saves deal for Morgan Stanley.Oct 13 2008 -
Weekend at Mack's
Will Hank Paulson save the Japanese from their losing deal with Morgan Stanley?Oct 10 2008 -
We're All Banks Now
Move by Goldman and Morgan Stanley is the end of Wall Street as we know it. What comes next?Sep 22 2008
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Microsoft to sell Razorfish: report
Jun 29 2009
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Union asks Morgan Stanley to reverse exec pay hikes: report
Jun 24 2009
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Economy prompts big U.S. banks to slash internships
Jun 23 2009
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JPMorgan expects $1.1 billion Q2 charge after TARP
Jun 19 2009
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Bailed-out banks' CEOs used jets for personal use: report
Jun 19 2009
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Morgan Stanley eyes changes in prime-brokerage unit: report
Jun 17 2009
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More Evaporating Billions at Morgan Stanley
Dec 17 2008
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Demonic Short Sellers
Nov 25 2008
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Wall Street's Most Convenient Bank
Oct 29 2008
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Did the End of the Investment Banks Cause the Latest Sell-Off?
Oct 27 2008
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The Unreassurable Markets
Oct 15 2008
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Fannie Mae Prices New Issue 3-Year Benchmark Notes(R) Jul-09-2009, 10:26AM EDT
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Fannie Mae Announces Offering of New Issue 3-Year Benchmark Notes(R) Jul-08-2009, 02:56PM EDT
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XenoPort Announces Pricing of Public Offering of Common Stock Jul-08-2009, 09:21AM EDT
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XenoPort Announces Proposed Public Offering of Common Stock Jul-07-2009, 04:05PM EDT
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Jul 09 2009
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Midday Glance: Investment Banks companies
(Businessweek)Jul 09 2009 -
Financial sleazebaggery: It's ba-a-a-ck!
(CreativeLoafing.com)Jul 09 2009 -
Investment Banks companies shares up at 10 a.m.
(Canadian Business Online)Jul 09 2009 -
Jul 09 2009
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Jul 09 2009
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Saint Gobain cut to equal-weight by Morgan Stanley
(MarketWatch)Jul 09 2009 -
Legal & General upped at Morgan Stanley
(MarketWatch)Jul 09 2009 -
Jul 08 2009
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Jul 08 2009
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Jul 09 2009
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Jul 09 2009
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Jul 09 2009
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Ex-Morgan Stanley Exec. Founds Hedge Fund, Alts. Advisory
(FINalternatives)Jul 09 2009 -
Further reading
(FT Alphaville)Jul 09 2009
Employees
Financials
| Income Statement | 12/2008 | 10/2008 | 07/2008 | 04/2008 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Gross Operating Profit | 7.45 Bil. | 10.61 Bil. | 11.48 Bil. | 15.08 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 7.45 Bil. | 10.61 Bil. | 11.48 Bil. | 15.08 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 7.45 Bil. | 10.61 Bil. | 11.48 Bil. | 15.08 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | -2.3 Bil. | 1.42 Bil. | 1.03 Bil. | 1.55 Bil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | -2.34 | 1.36 | 0.97 | 1.5 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | -2.34 | 1.32 | 0.95 | 1.45 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 12/2008 | 10/2008 | 07/2008 | 04/2008 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Assets | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Liabilities | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Capitalization | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Cash Flow | 12/2008 | 10/2008 | 07/2008 | 04/2008 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | NA | 1.01 Bil. | 539 Mil. | -509 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | NA | -8.07 Bil. | 8.04 Bil. | 14.62 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | NA | -1.9 Bil. | -1.82 Bil. | -4.63 Bil. |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Gross Operating Profit | 61.88 Bil. | 85.33 Bil. | 52.71 Bil. | 31.22 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 61.88 Bil. | 85.33 Bil. | 52.71 Bil. | 31.22 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 61.88 Bil. | 85.33 Bil. | 52.71 Bil. | 31.48 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 1.71 Bil. | 3.21 Bil. | 7.47 Bil. | 4.94 Bil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 1.54 | 3.13 | 7.38 | 4.7 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 1.45 | 2.98 | 7.07 | 4.57 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Assets | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Liabilities | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Capitalization | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | NA | NA | -2.34 Bil. | -4.12 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | NA | NA | 54.34 Bil. | 32.08 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | NA | NA | -8.81 Bil. | -3.4 Bil. |
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