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Morgan StanleyMSBUYOct 19, 2021Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 18, 2026. Market Open.
Their report was note received well and shares tumbled 4%. The past few years this has been rangebound at $80-100, now near $80. Net revenues were up 1% YOY as EPS sank 32.5% YOY. Overall, it was an unremarkable quarter and management's comments were "mixed" at best and guarded. It was downbeat. Overall, he's not thrilled with their quarter, but he's not ready to throw in the towel, because they pay a 4% yield and are buying back a lot of shares. He may add shares around $78-80. Overall, disappointing.
Likes the money centre banks. Will do well with a normalized yield curve, as it enhances net interest margins. Fed signalling interest rates coming down should depress the short end of the curve, with the long end maintaining itself somewhat.
The group is trading at about a 30% discount to normalized valuations of around 13.5x earnings. That carries through to book value, trading at discounts to historical norms. He owns JPM, BAC, and MS, and that's where he'd put money.
He owns no US banks, everything's been hurt. Investment banking, so it's a proxy for the stock market. Trading below book value. Curve re-steepening is negative for banks until that steepening levels off; we're mid-way through that. It's a bit early, but it wouldn't be bad to own a little bit of US banking right now.
He had sold the banks (MS, BAC, but is long JPM) to buy QQQs, and he stands by that rotation. If any banks decline, it would be the regional ones, which he's avoided since the spring crisis. His outlook on the banks is limited upside, given regulations restricting hoarding capital on the balance sheet, which will impede loan growth. Plus, the economy will start of contract. MS and BAC are good companies, but he'd rather buy the debt of these stocks, because their balance sheets will be fortified.