Morgan Stanley Trades Like an All-Weather Bank

Bank of America Corp. and Morgan Stanley exposed a stock market puzzle on Wednesday. Both reported record third-quarter earnings following roaring results from rivals the day before. The stock market rewarded the two banks and Citigroup Inc. after their results, but not Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The divergent response wasn’t just because the chief executive officers of JPMorgan and Goldman made downbeat comments on credit risks and overexuberance on Tuesday. It was more to do with the huge gap in valuations between the banks, especially the two playing catch-up — Bank of America and Citigroup. Morgan Stanley stands out for its greater defenses against financial panics and crashes than the rest, although no one will be immune if there is a bubble in artificial intelligence or credit that bursts.

Wall Street boomed in the third quarter. It was the busiest three months for new share listings since 2021 and brought a flurry of takeover deals alongside very active trading. Almost everything ran hot.

Bank of America reported a 14% jump in equities trading revenue versus the same period last year to nearly $2.3 billion, its highest ever for a quarter. Its total revenue for all trading and investment banking fees hit a record, too, just topping the previous high in the first quarter of 2021.

Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley reported its best-ever quarterly top line at $18.2 billion, up 18.5% year on year, and a record quarterly return on tangible equity at 23.5%. Its total revenue across investment banking and markets came in at $8.39 billion, within a whisker of its previous highwater mark of $8.45 billion in the first quarter of 2021.