Morgan Stanley is betting US bank capital rules will ease

Morgan Stanley is betting US bank capital rules will ease
Firm turns bullish with softer regulatory touch likely to spark buybacks.
JAN 30, 2024
By  Bloomberg

Morgan Stanley analysts are turning bullish on major US banks on expectations that pending regulatory changes for higher capital levels will be less onerous than the current proposal, opening the door for an increase in buybacks.

The analysts, led by Betsy Graseck, raised their recommendation on Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. to overweight and upgraded the large-cap banking group to attractive, according to a Tuesday note.

The signature bank capital overhaul of Michael Barr, vice chair for supervision at the US Federal Reserve, was unveiled in July and came to be known as the Basel 3 Endgame, requiring the biggest lenders to increase the amount of capital they set aside by almost 20%. Facing large opposition from within the Fed and banks, Bloomberg reported earlier this month that Barr is open to make concessions.

“Reading the tea leaves, it looks like Basel Endgame will be lightened up,” the analysts wrote. “This opens the door for a significant increase in buybacks, as large cap banks have the highest excess capital levels ever.”

The biggest US banks have built a fortress $154 billion of excess capital above their current requirements to offset potential headwinds. The final rule could be less onerous than the proposal, and with over four years until full implementation, banks have time to take mitigating actions, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Nick Beckwith wrote in a note last week.

The Morgan Stanley analysts also upgraded Bank of New York Mellon Corp. to equal weight from underweight and downgraded Northern Trust Corp. to underweight from equal weight, due to valuation.

Latest News

UBS sees a net loss of 111 financial advisors in the Americas during the second quarter
UBS sees a net loss of 111 financial advisors in the Americas during the second quarter

Some in the industry say that more UBS financial advisors this year will be heading for the exits.

JPMorgan reopens fight with fintechs, crypto over fees for customer data
JPMorgan reopens fight with fintechs, crypto over fees for customer data

The Wall Street giant has blasted data middlemen as digital freeloaders, but tech firms and consumer advocates are pushing back.

The average retiree is facing $173K in health care costs, Fidelity says
The average retiree is facing $173K in health care costs, Fidelity says

Research reveals a 4% year-on-year increase in expenses that one in five Americans, including one-quarter of Gen Xers, say they have not planned for.

Advisor moves: NY-based Coastline wealth adds three teams with over $430M in assets
Advisor moves: NY-based Coastline wealth adds three teams with over $430M in assets

Raymond James also lured another ex-Edward Jones advisor in South Carolina, while LPL welcomed a mother-and-son team from Edward Jones and Thrivent.

Fintech bytes: Vestwell comes through for underserved savers with multilingual support
Fintech bytes: Vestwell comes through for underserved savers with multilingual support

MyVest and Vestmark have also unveiled strategic partnerships aimed at helping advisors and RIAs bring personalization to more clients.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.