Should You Have These Two Banks In Your Portfolio?

 | Jul 17, 2022 09:48AM ET

Despite the stock market theory saying that banks should benefit from a rising interest rate environment, it has been one of the tougher years in recent memory for the financial sector. The iShares U.S. Financials ETF (NYSE:IYF) is down 25% from the all-time high it tagged back in January and is in fact now below its pre-pandemic level.

It’s fair to say that Wall Street banks are struggling with a collapse in IPOs and debt and equity issuance this year, which is a complete reversal from the market environment that drove stellar results last year. The change has been triggered by broad declines in financial assets, increasing pessimism over the possibility of a recession and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

But does that mean investors should stay away indefinitely or are there potential opportunities starting to open up in individual names? With fresh earnings after being released let’s take a look at two of the bigger names on Wall Street and see if there’s enough long-term potential to justify a starting position.

h2 Morgan Stanley /h2

Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) shares are down more than 30% from their February high and in fact set a fresh low yesterday morning before recovering into the close. The volatility was driven by the release of their Q2 earnings which came out before the bell rang to start the session. Both topline revenue and bottom line EPS missed expectations, the former contracting 11.5% year over year.

It wasn’t exactly the surprise beat investors would have been hoping for, and with shares already at 52 week lows you’d have to be thinking there’s a good chance this will sink them further. The bank’s results were hurt by a steep 55% decline in investment banking revenue. This confirmed what some analysts had feared for Morgan Stanley, which runs one of the larger equity capital markets operations on Wall Street.

But there are signs that we’re nearing capitulation and for those of us with a long enough investment horizon it’s worth taking note of the underlying strength still in play at Morgan Stanley. Management saw fit to raise the quarterly dividend by 11%, hardly the move of a company that sees things getting worse. On the contrary, this is considered one of the most bullish signals a company can give to the market. Is Morgan Stanley telling investors it's time to start backing up the truck?