Morgan Stanley CEO says no immediate plans to step down

Reuters

Published Dec 13, 2019 04:59PM ET

Morgan Stanley CEO says no immediate plans to step down

(Reuters) - Morgan Stanley (N:MS) Chief Executive Officer James Gorman has no immediate plans to step down and is developing a strong second rung of leadership, the Wall Street banker told CNBC on Friday.

"I want to develop a team to replace me," he said, adding he had "no desire to be here when I'm 70 years old."

The comments come against the backdrop of uncertainty over the bank's long-term succession planning after the retirement in June of former president Colm Kelleher, Gorman's second-in-command and widely seen as a potential successor.

After Kelleher's departure was announced, Gorman had said co-presidents could be named, but no appointments have been made yet.

Internally, potential successors include Ted Pick, who has Colm's old job of running institutional securities, and Andy Saperstein, who runs wealth management.

Gorman also said the U.S. Federal Reserve should hold rates steady and sounded confident about the health of the consumer, which had helped buoy https://reut.rs/2tbw785 big banks' third-quarter earnings.

He also said the bank would "always" remain based in London, as Britain speeds https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-election/johnson-election-victory-propels-britain-toward-swift-brexit-idUSKBN1YH18O toward Brexit after Prime Minister Boris Johnson's crushing election victory.