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Morgan Stanley May Buy Rest Of Wealth Management JV From Citigroup

Morgan Stanley may purchase the remainder of its wealth-management joint venture from Citigroup as soon as April, having been given Federal Reserve blessing on its capital plan.
Morgan Stanley may purchase the remainder of its
wealth management joint venture from Citigroup as soon as April,
having been
given the Federal Reserve's blessing on its capital plan, media
reports have said.
The Wall Street-headquartered firm will be allowed to move
ahead with its $4.7 billion purchase of Citigroup's stake in
Morgan Stanley
Wealth Management, reports said.
This publication contacted the US firm to elaborate on the
reports, but the company had not responded at the time of going
to press.
"The Federal Reserve's non-objection to our capital
plan is another important step towards full ownership of our
wealth management
business," James Gorman, chief executive at Morgan Stanley, was
quoted as
saying in a statement.
"Subject to further regulatory approval, we look
forward to completing the acquisition of the remaining 35 per
cent stake in our
wealth management joint venture," he said.
Morgan Stanley has argued it could afford the
wealth management purchase even under a scenario involving
extreme market
stress. In January, Gorman said the firm intended to own the
entire
wealth management business this year, subject to Fed approval.
The Fed carried out stress test results on a number of US
large firms earlier this week. The central bank said Morgan
Stanley’s Tier 1
common ratio, a barometer of financial health, would fall to 5.62
per cent in a
financial crisis, which is above the 5 per cent minimum that is
required.
If Morgan Stanley does take 100 per cent control of the old
Smith Barney business through its JV with Citi, it would complete
a process
started in 2009.
Meanwhile, this publication has heard a number of rumours
from the wealth management industry that Morgan Stanley is
looking to spin off
some parts of its international (non-US) wealth operations, with
various banks
being named, although none has commented thus far when
approached.