Here's an odd situation: Wall Street's biggest banks just posted some of the strongest trading quarters anyone can remember, and yet investors are treating the news with a collective shrug. Sometimes great earnings just aren't enough.
Goldman's Record-Breaking Quarter
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) absolutely crushed it on the trading side, putting up numbers that made history. The bank's equities trading revenue hit $4.31 billion for the fourth quarter—the highest figure any bank has ever posted. Yes, ever.
The broader picture looked strong too. Goldman reported earnings per share of $14.01, sailing past the $11.48 consensus by a comfortable margin. Revenue landed at $13.45 billion, just slightly under the $13.9 billion analysts were expecting.
Breaking it down further, Global Banking and Markets revenue reached $10.41 billion, well above expectations of $9.27 billion. Investment banking revenue jumped 25% year over year to $2.58 billion, showing strength beyond just the trading desks.
Assets under management climbed to $3.61 trillion, topping the $3.52 trillion estimate, while total deposits ticked up 2.2% quarter over quarter to $501 billion. The bank even sweetened the pot by raising its quarterly dividend to $4.50 per share from $4.00.
So naturally, Goldman shares fell 1% in premarket trading Thursday. Makes perfect sense, right?
Morgan Stanley Joins the Party
Morgan Stanley (MS) followed a similar script, delivering another strong quarter powered by equities trading and wealth management.
The bank posted earnings per share of $2.68, beating the $2.41 estimate. Revenue totaled $17.89 billion, comfortably ahead of the $17.6 billion consensus.
Equities sales and trading revenue came in at $3.67 billion, above expectations of $3.55 billion. Wealth management continued its steady performance with $8.43 billion in revenue, also topping estimates.
Total deposits rose to $415.52 billion, exceeding forecasts. The board declared a quarterly dividend of $1.00 per share.
Morgan Stanley shares managed a modest 1.8% gain in premarket trading—a bit better than Goldman, but hardly the victory lap you'd expect after such strong results.




