Morgan Stanley

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Three Big Banks Apply to Repay TARP Funds

Goldman, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley want out of pay restrictions

(Newser) - Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley have applied to repay a combined $45 billion of TARP funds, Bloomberg reports. The three banking giants must receive permission from the Fed before returning the money. The repayments would be the most substantial since Congress established the $700 billion program, and will...

Stocks, Commodities Plunge
 Stocks, Commodities Plunge 
MARKET Open

Stocks, Commodities Plunge

(Newser) - Stocks plunged at the open, as banks sold shares to raise capital, and consumer and commodity stocks took a pounding, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Dow was down 140, the Nasdaq down 1.8% and the S&P off 2.1. Oil producers were hit hard as crude fell...

At NY Fed, Geithner Got Cozy With Wall Street

Geithner's cozy history with the high finance club draws critics' ire

(Newser) - While some feel Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has been an aggressive steward of the public trust, some critics point to his days as New York Fed president as proof he’s too cozy with the very banks that crippled the financial system. The New York Times investigates his tenure there,...

Treasury Ups Offer to Chrysler Lenders

Treasury blinks in standoff that will determine auto maker's future

(Newser) - The Treasury Department is offering banks holding Chrysler's debt a better deal in the latest round of the back-and-forth over the automaker's future, the Wall Street Journal reports. The counter offer—still way short of what the banks seek—proposes to give lenders 22% of the $6.9 billion Chrysler...

Banks, Treasury Play Chicken on Chrysler Deal

Alternate headline: Banks, Treasury Play Chicken on Chrysler Deal

(Newser) - A group of big banks balked at the Treasury’s proposal that they slash 85% of Chrysler’s debt, the government’s second such request. Instead, in what the Wall Street Journal calls a “significant act of brinkmanship” as an April 30 deadline looms, the banks, including bailout recipients...

Bailed-Out Banks Don't Want to Bail Out Chrysler

Lawmakers say rescued banks should cooperate in auto rescue plan

(Newser) - Auto task force Steven Rattner's request that four big banks write off their $7 billion debt to Chrysler in return for nothing met with a big no from dropped jaws, reports the Washington Post. JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, and Goldman Sachs are seeking a better deal, but critics argue...

Brain Drain Wallops Wall Street
 Brain Drain Wallops Wall Street 

Brain Drain Wallops Wall Street

It's not just the firings: others are leaving for safer jobs

(Newser) - The financial crisis is reshaping not just the landscape of Wall Street, but its face as well, reports the New York Times in a look at the hemorrhaging of the Street's top talent. Layoffs aside, finance's best and brightest—arguably the same daring risk-takers responsible for the recession—are seizing...

Cash-Poor MGM Mirage May Sell Casinos

(Newser) - MGM Mirage, the gambling conglomerate, is considering the sale of casino properties in Michigan and Mississippi to pay down debt and save an underfunded Las Vegas development, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Vegas-based company has retained Morgan Stanley to shepherd the sales of the MGM Grand Detroit and Biloxi’...

Wall St. Looks to Skirt Bonus Limits With Padded Salaries

Attempt to skirt new rules could anger shareholders

(Newser) - In a move to skirt government restrictions on executive pay for recipients of bailout cash, some Wall Street companies are discussing raising base salaries, the Journal reports. Citigroup and Morgan Stanley are considering the idea, which is gaining currency as regulators keep a watchful eye on bonuses, say industry insiders....

Dow Up 4 as Stocks Waver
 Dow Up 4 as Stocks Waver 
MARKETS

Dow Up 4 as Stocks Waver

Caution follows yesterday's rally

(Newser) - Stocks finished below today’s session highs but closed with slight gains, barely making the first two-day winning streak in a month, the Wall Street Journal reports. Financials mostly gained, with shares of Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America up at least 4%. The Dow closed up 3.91...

Citi Posts $8.3B Loss, Prepares to Split in Two

Still smarting from bad mortgage bets, the company will split to remain solvent

(Newser) - Citigroup lost $8.29 billion in the fourth quarter—twice as much as expected—as the credit crisis continues to batter big banks, Bloomberg reports. The bank suffered a net loss of $1.72 per share, falling far short of analysts’ estimates. Citigroup, which lost 77 percent of its trading...

Citi to Shrink by a Third— Back to Pre-Merger Size

(Newser) - Say goodbye to the Citigroup empire. When the company releases its earnings next week, it'll also unveil a drastic plan to slice away businesses until it’s roughly two-thirds of its current size, the Wall Street Journal reports, and looks much like Citicorp did before the merger that created Citigroup....

Citi, Morgan Stanley Merge Brokerages

(Newser) - Rumors of Citigroup’s plan to merge its brokerage unit with that of Morgan Stanley have proven true, as both companies’ boards approved the move today, CNBC reports. Morgan Stanley will control 51% of the joint venture between its operation and Citi’s Smith Barney. Observers see Stanley’s option...

Stockbrokers in High Demand on Back-to-Basics Wall St.

Some, unlike disgraced investment bankers and traders, even command bonuses

(Newser) - With investment bankers and trading desks disgraced by crippling losses, the everyday stockbroker is enjoying a renaissance as Wall Street firms look to stay relevant to customers and investors, the Wall Street Journal reports. The likely deal between Morgan Stanley and Citigroup that would create the world’s largest brokerage...

Dow Drops 125 With Banks, Materials
 Dow Drops 125 
 With Banks, Materials 
MARKETS

Dow Drops 125 With Banks, Materials

Market awaits Alcoa earnings after close

(Newser) - Stocks posted losses today as financial and basic-materials firms led losses, MarketWatch reports. Alcoa, which reports earnings after the bell, fell 7.32% on expectations the steel giant will report losses of 10 cents a share. The Dow closed down 125.13 at 8,474. The Nasdaq fell 32.80...

Stocks Edge Down Ahead of Earnings
 Stocks Edge Down 
 Ahead of Earnings 
MARKET Open

Stocks Edge Down Ahead of Earnings

Dow off 50 in early trading; first reports due late today

(Newser) - Stocks moved lower at today’s open as traders held their collective breath ahead of what’s expected to be a dismal earning season, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Dow was down 50 points recently, to 8,548, while the S&P and Nasdaq dipped 0.95% and 0....

Morgan Stanley Near $3B Deal for Smith Barney

The joint venture would create the world's largest retail brokerage

(Newser) - Morgan Stanley is close to a deal giving it control of Citgroup’s Smith Barney business and creating the world’s largest retail brokerage, reports Reuters. The joint venture would give Morgan 51% of Smith Barney for up to $3 billion. In addition to the cash, Citi would benefit from...

Dow Off 100 as Rate Rally Dies
 Dow Off 100 as Rate Rally Dies 
MARKETS

Dow Off 100 as Rate Rally Dies

Stocks fall on poor earnings, more job cuts

(Newser) - Stocks turned lower as jubilation over the Fed’s rate cut yesterday died down and concerns about the slumping economy returned today, the Wall Street Journal reports. Losses by Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs dragged financials lower. The Dow closed down 99.80 at 8,824.34. The Nasdaq fell...

Stocks Sink as Morgan Misses
 Stocks Sink as Morgan Misses 
MARKET Open

Stocks Sink as Morgan Misses

(Newser) - Stocks retreated this morning, after Morgan Stanley reported a worse-than-expected $2.29 billion loss. Goldman Sachs posted a similar number yesterday, but whereas its stock rose, Morgan’s dropped more than 5%. The Dow likewise shed 107 points at the open, while the Nasdaq and S&P each dropped 1....

Morgan Stanley to Withhold Bonuses Until Bets Pay Off

Wall Street showing bonus season restraint

(Newser) - Attempting to curb criticism after taking billions in government bailout cash, Morgan Stanley has attached a “claw-back” provision to employee bonuses this year that allows the bank to withhold payouts if employees don’t manage risk properly. The Wall Street behemoth will hold onto a portion of employees’ bonuses...

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