KEY POINTS
  • Profit surged 39 percent to $2.44 billion as revenue topped estimates, fueled by strong trading and advisory results.
  • Morgan Stanley's strong trading revenue, along with those from other Wall Street rivals, leaves Goldman Sachs' trading results from Tuesday as the outlier in underwhelming investors.
James Gorman, chief executive officer of Morgan Stanley.

Morgan Stanley crushed profit expectations on trading and investment banking results that exceeded analysts' expectations.

The New York-based company said profit surged 39 percent to $2.44 billion in the second quarter from a year earlier, exceeding the $2 billion estimate of analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters. Earnings per share of $1.30 surpassed the $1.11 estimate. Revenues climbed 12 percent to $10.6 billion, about $500 million more than analysts expected.

The shares were up 3.9 percent at 9:47 a.m.

In the bank's equities division, the biggest on Wall Street, the company delivered $2.5 billion in revenue on good performance across all products, especially financing, compared with the $2.29 billion estimate. It's bond trading department produced $1.4 billion, compared with the $1.29 billion estimate, on higher results in commodities and credit.

"Morgan Stanley’s performance in sales and trading was particularly impressive, especially compared to rival Goldman Sachs," Octavio Marenzi, head of capital markets management consultancy Opimas, said in an e-mail. On Tuesday, Goldman reported trading results that essentially matched expectations, prompting questions from analysts on why it didn't outperform like its rivals, including J.P. Morgan Chase.