Morgan Stanley outperforms rivals with profit beat

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Updated 20 January 2022
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Morgan Stanley outperforms rivals with profit beat

Morgan Stanley reported fourth-quarter profit which beat market expectations, outperforming rivals as its focus on advising wealth clients bore fruit, sending its shares up as much as 3.7 percent on Wednesday.


The Wall Street investment bank also benefited from a boom in global dealmaking and keeping expenses in check at a time when its peers had been hampered with rising wages and technology costs.


Full-year profit as well as revenue was a record for the bank, which advised on some of the world’s biggest mergers during the year. Net income surged 37 percent to $15 billion and revenue jumped 23 percent to nearly $60 billion.


The bank also lifted its long term target for return on tangible capital equity (ROTCE), a key metric which measures how well a bank uses shareholder money to produce profit.

It is targeting ROTCE of at least 20 percent, up from 17 percent previously.


“We are increasing our ROTCE goal to reflect the earnings power we see in our business model,” Chief Executive James Gorman told analysts on a conference call.


Since taking over a decade ago, the 63-year-old CEO has transformed Morgan Stanley from a Wall Street firm heavily weighted in money-losing trading businesses into a more balanced bank.

He was the driving force behind Morgan Stanley’s decision to acquire Smith Barney, and made wealth management the cornerstone of his plan to stabilize revenue.


The 2020 acquisitions of E*Trade and Eaton Vance for a combined $20 billion doubled down on that strategy, differentiating Morgan Stanley’s focus from its peers.


The bank’s wealth management unit delivered a 10 percent rise in revenue to $6.25 billion powering a record annual profit.


In the quarter ended Dec. 31, profit rose to $3.59 billion, or $2.01 per share and was above market expectations of $1.93 per share.


Shares in Morgan Stanley were up 2.5 percent in morning trading.


Its results rounded out a mixed earnings season for the nation’s largest banks that cashed in on the M&A wave, but were dragged down by weak trading and higher expenses, which swelled as they spent heavily to retain key personnel in a race for talent.


Morgan Stanley’s traditional rival, Goldman Sachs on Tuesday reported fourth-quarter profit which missed expectations, sending its shares down as much as 8 percent.

JPMorgan beat profit expectations last Friday but saw its shares fall 6 percent on expense concerns.


In contrast to some rivals, Morgan Stanley had benefited from bringing technology in-house through its acquisitions rather than having to build it from scratch, Gorman told analysts.


It has also linked pay with performance in its wealth management and investment banking divisions, Gorman said.


Compensation expense was roughly flat during the quarter compared with a year ago.

HEALTHY PIPELINE
Morgan Stanley’s investment bank produced a strong performance and Chief Financial Officer Sharon Yeshaya said its pipeline remained “healthy” going into 2022.


“CEO confidence remains high, and markets remain open and constructive,” she told analysts.


In 2021, Wall Street investment banking giants benefited from a global dealmaking boom.


Morgan Stanley advised on 420 deals last year and was ranked third in the global investment banking league tables, following larger rivals Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, according to data from Dealogic.


Overall revenue from institutional securities, which houses the Morgan Stanley’s investment banking and trading units, fell slightly to $6.7 billion, mainly due to weak trading.


Revenue from trading fell 26 percent. Equity trading revenue rose 13 percent, but the gains were wiped out by a 31 percent slump in fixed income trading revenue to $1.23 billion.


Overall revenue rose to $14.5 billion compared with $13.6 billion a year ago.


Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves rise to a 6-year high of $475bn

Updated 22 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves rise to a 6-year high of $475bn

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves climbed 3 percent month on month in January to SR1.78 trillion, up SR58.7 billion ($15.6 billion) from December and marking a six-year high.

On an annual basis, the Saudi Central Bank’s net foreign assets rose by 10 percent, equivalent to SR155.8 billion, according to data from the Saudi Central Bank, Argaam reported.

The reserve assets, a crucial indicator of economic stability and external financial strength, comprise several key components.

According to the central bank, also known as SAMA, the Kingdom’s reserves include foreign securities, foreign currency, and bank deposits, as well as its reserve position at the International Monetary Fund, Special Drawing Rights, and monetary gold.

The rise in reserves underscores the strength and liquidity of the Kingdom’s financial position and aligns with Saudi Arabia’s goal of strengthening its financial safety net as it advances economic diversification under Vision 2030.

The value of foreign currency reserves, which represent approximately 95 percent of the total holdings, increased by about 10 percent during January 2026 compared to the same month in 2025, reaching SR1.68 trillion.

The value of the reserve at the IMF increased by 9 percent to reach SR13.1 billion.

Meanwhile, SDRs rose by 5 percent during the period to reach SR80.5 billion.

The Kingdom’s gold reserves remained stable at SR1.62 billion, the same level it has maintained since January 2008.

Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserve assets saw a monthly rise of 5 percent in November, climbing to SR1.74 trillion, according to the Kingdom’s central bank.

Overall, the continued advancement in reserve assets highlights the strength of Saudi Arabia’s fiscal and monetary buffers. These resources support the national currency, help maintain financial system stability, and enhance the country’s ability to navigate global economic volatility.

The sustained accumulation of foreign reserves is a critical pillar of the Kingdom’s economic stability. It directly reinforces investor confidence in the riyal’s peg to the US dollar, a foundational monetary policy, by providing SAMA with ample resources to defend the currency if needed.

Furthermore, this financial buffer enhances the nation’s sovereign credit profile, lowers national borrowing costs, and provides essential fiscal space to navigate global economic volatility while continuing to fund its ambitious Vision 2030 transformation agenda.