Morgan Stanley is targetting young money with E-Trade

Morgan Stanley is trading in its white shoes for Converse Chuck Taylors.
That’s the initial impression on Wall Street at least after the bank announced that it had agreed to buy discount brokerage E-Trade Financial Corp. for $13 billion in an all-stock takeover, the biggest acquisition by a large US bank since the financial crisis. It would add E-Trade’s $360 billion of client assets to Morgan Stanley’s $2.7 trillion and instantly give the bank more direct access to consumers through digital banking and brokerage services. While the two brands would remain distinct under the arrangement, it seems on its face like a match between two companies with polar opposite reputations.
Now, it was hardly a secret that Chief Executive Officer James Gorman has been emphasising wealth management as Morgan Stanley’s future, largely because the revenue is more dependable than high-stakes trading. In the firm’s second-quarter earnings call last July, when the wealth-management division posted a 28% profit margin, Gorman was asked how he could possibly sustain that pace. He insisted “we’re playing for the long run.”
The long run, it turns out, involves going where Morgan Stanley has rarely opted to go before: down-market. “It is so off-brand for the white-shoe investment bank Morgan Stanley, I’m just stunned,” David Bahnsen, founder of wealth-management firm the Bahnsen Group, who used to work at Morgan Stanley, said on Bloomberg TV.
I’m not so sure it should come as much of a surprise. After all, there were rumors towards the end of last year that Goldman Sachs Group Inc. was contemplating an acquisition of E-Trade on top of its other retail-client initiatives like its consumer bank, Marcus. Yes, Goldman and Morgan Stanley are probably the two Wall Street titans most associated with catering to the wealthiest and most financially savvy. But they’re also astute enough to see which way the winds are blowing for the industry: Technology is democratising the way people invest, save and trade.
As Gorman sees it, that trend is especially true for the “next generation.” In a conference call, he summarised his vision by saying that E-Trade gives Morgan Stanley access to people with what he called “emerging wealth.” By getting them into the fold early, Gorman expects they’ll move over to the bank’s existing wealth-management offerings once they accumulate more money and need a robust financial plan.
E-Trade also stands to benefit from standing underneath Morgan Stanley’s umbrella. After Charles Schwab Corp. slashed commissions for US stock trading to zero in October, E-Trade had little choice but to follow suit. Unsurprisingly, smaller fees means compressed profit margins. The race to bottom was due in part to rise of Robinhood Financial LLC, which said it had more than 10 million accounts as of December.
Powered by Morgan Stanley, E-Trade will almost certainly avoid extinction. E-Trade shares soared 24% and Morgan Stanley’s dipped 4.1% at the start of trading. The deal should close in the fourth quarter — nothing about the transaction seems like a glaring issue for regulators. The one wild card would be a rival bid, but Bloomberg Intelligence’s David Ritter considers that “unlikely” because of the already steep premium. Maybe some Converse shoes will be next.
—Bloomberg

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend