Morgan Stanley capped an exceptional 2025 with a fourth-quarter earnings beat that showcased the power of its diversified business model.
The investment bank reported net revenues of $17.9 billion and earnings per share of $2.68, both comfortably surpassing Wall Street expectations.
For the full year, the firm delivered record net revenues of $70.6 billion with a return on tangible equity of 21.6%, a metric that matters deeply to equity investors tracking profitability.
The results reflect strength across its wealth management anchor, a rebound in investment banking, and disciplined expense management.
Morgan Stanley Q4 earnings: Numbers behind the outperformance
The quarterly earnings paint a picture of consistent execution.
Morgan Stanley’s $17.9 billion in Q4 revenues represented a 10.3% year-over-year jump from $16.2 billion in Q4 2024, while the $2.68 EPS figure beat consensus estimates by $0.27.
For context, that means the firm earned $2.68 for every share outstanding—a key metric that directly impacts investor returns.
The full-year story is even more impressive.
Morgan Stanley generated $70.6 billion in annual revenues, up 14.3% from $61.8 billion in 2024, and posted net income of $16.9 billion.
With a ROTCE of 21.6%, the firm delivered strong capital efficiency, meaning each dollar of shareholder equity generated meaningful profits.
The bank’s efficiency ratio, a measure of how much it spends to generate each dollar of revenue, improved to 68% from 71% in the prior year.
Lower efficiency ratios signal better cost control.
Importantly, Morgan Stanley maintained a Standardized Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 15.0% at year-end.
This is Wall Street jargon for a capital strength metric that regulators monitor closely. Simply put, the higher this ratio, the more cushion a bank has to absorb losses and support lending.
At 15%, Morgan Stanley has ample capital to weather challenges and return cash to shareholders.
Wealth management drives consistent earnings
Wealth management remains the engine room of Morgan Stanley’s profitability.
The division reported Q4 net revenues of $8.43 billion, up 13% year-over-year, reflecting the sticky nature of advisory and asset management fees.
More tellingly, the firm captured $122 billion in net new assets in Q4 alone and $356 billion for the full year, evidence that high-net-worth clients continue trusting Morgan Stanley with their money.
This is a durable business model. When markets rise and client portfolios grow, the firm benefits from both the market gains (pushing assets higher) and recurring advisory fees.
That combination creates what Wall Street calls “operating leverage,” efficiency that improves as revenues grow.
Investment banking bounces back
Morgan Stanley’s investment banking business is clearly back in form.
Revenues from the segment jumped 47% year over year to $2.41 billion, as deal activity picked up across mergers and acquisitions, equity and debt underwriting, and advisory work.
The rebound is a sign that corporate confidence is improving, and that companies are once again willing to spend heavily on investment banks to raise capital and pursue M&A.
The broader Institutional Securities division, which includes trading as well as investment banking, brought in $7.93 billion in Q4 net revenues.
Performance inside the division was mixed: equities trading rose 10% on stronger client activity, while fixed-income results dipped slightly as the market faced pressure from swings in commodities and foreign exchange.
Morgan Stanley also continued returning cash to shareholders.
It repurchased $1.5 billion in stock during the quarter and $4.6 billion over the full year, and its board declared a quarterly dividend of $1.00 per share, payable on February 13, 2026.
For investors, that combination of buybacks and dividends is meaningful as it either boosts the value of remaining shares or delivers steady income.
Alongside the earnings beat, it helps explain why the stock ticked higher after the results.
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