Market volatility hurt revenue at Morgan Stanley's wealth-management business in the first quarter amid investors' concerns about the health of the global economy.
The unit's $3.7 billion of revenue was down 2% from last year's fourth quarter and fell 4% from the first quarter of 2015, according to Morgan Stanley spokesman James Wiggins. While client assets rose 1% to $2 trillion from the fourth quarter, they were down 2% year-over-year.
“Client assets are down given the volatility in the market,” Jonathan Pruzan, Morgan Stanley's chief financial officer, said during an earnings call Monday with investors and analysts. There was “muted client activity in an unfavorable market.”
Investors have been grappling with concerns about an economic slowdown in China, negative interest rates internationally and questions surrounding the number of times the Federal Reserve will hike rates in the U.S. this year. Despite these headwinds, Mr. Pruzan said the bank is “very pleased” with the relative “stability" in wealth management.
Morgan Stanley had 15,888 financial advisers at the end of March, little changed from the end of last year and the first quarter of 2015, according to Mr. Wiggins. The firm would like to keep the pool, which is the largest in the brokerage industry, at roughly that size, Mr Pruzan said.
Morgan Stanley's advisers produced $923,000 of annualized revenue in the first quarter, down 3% from the fourth quarter and off 4% from the first three months of 2015, according to the spokesman.
While the firm continues to digest the “nitty gritty” of the Labor Department's fiduciary rule released this month, Morgan Stanley had been
preparing for the new regulation for a while and making the necessary investments to comply, according to Mr. Pruzan.
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The rule, which requires advisers to put the interest of their clients ahead of their own when handling retirement accounts, has been a
major focus of the brokerage industry as many firms will have to increase their investments in compliance and technology. The risk of running afoul of the highly prescriptive regulation also has prompted concern.
Morgan Stanley is creating a help desk to handle questions that brokers might have on the new best-interests rule, according to Christine Jockle, a spokeswoman for the firm.
The Labor Department's fiduciary rule runs more than 1,000 pages.
“It's good to have it in writing,” James Gorman, the bank's chief executive officer, said of
the long-anticipated regulation. While important, he said “it's not the be-all and end-all” for Morgan Stanley's wealth management business.