Company Overview

Today was one of the most consequential mornings in recent financial sector history. JPMorgan reported its highest quarterly profit ever, with equities trading revenue climbing 86% to $6.03 billion — beating even the highest analyst estimate. Goldman Sachs posted a 44% EPS beat as Equity Underwriting surged 130% and Global Banking & Markets revenue jumped 53%, sending shares up 7.70%. Wells Fargo reported $2.00 EPS against a $1.72 estimate, and Citigroup delivered $3.15 EPS against $2.74 expected. The message from this morning’s five-bank sweep is unambiguous: Wall Street is booming, capital markets are firing on all cylinders, and Q2 2026 is shaping up as one of the strongest quarters for investment banking and trading revenue in a decade.

Tomorrow morning, before the open, Morgan Stanley reports Q2 2026 results — the last of the major banks, and arguably the one with the most direct exposure to what just drove Goldman’s extraordinary print. Morgan Stanley served as a lead underwriter and earned substantial fees from the SpaceX IPO, the largest in history at $86 billion, alongside Goldman Sachs — including debt-raising fees and “soft dollars” from hedge funds on the oversubscribed deal. The stock rose 4.55% today to $231.16 as investors positioned ahead of tomorrow’s print, the largest gain among the bank group. Analysts forecast Q2 EPS of $2.81–$2.89 on revenue of $19.34–$19.38 billion, up 28–36% year-over-year. The consensus EPS estimate has been revised upward 3.3% over the past 30 days — and that was before this morning’s Goldman and JPMorgan prints reset the bar for what a great trading quarter looks like.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

Earnings Tomorrow Morning → Goldman’s 44% Beat Sets the Read-Through Bar
Morgan Stanley reports Q2 2026 results before the market opens on Wednesday, July 15, with analysts forecasting EPS of $2.81–$2.89 on revenue of $19.34–$19.38 billion, representing 28–36% year-over-year EPS growth. Goldman’s 44% EPS beat and 130% surge in equity underwriting — driven by the same SpaceX IPO fees, the same capital markets environment, and the same trading volatility that benefited Morgan Stanley’s businesses simultaneously — establishes the framework for what the quarter looked like for institutions running overlapping businesses. Morgan Stanley’s equity underwriting and M&A advisory pipeline mirrors Goldman’s at scale, and the SpaceX read-through is the most direct.

SpaceX IPO → The Quarter’s Defining Revenue Event
Goldman Sachs served as lead-left underwriter on the SpaceX IPO, with Morgan Stanley among the primary co-underwriters, earning hundreds of millions in fees from the $86 billion offering itself, plus fees for raising debt for the newly public company, plus “soft dollars” from hedge funds on the oversubscribed deal. Morgan Stanley also has a shot at managing the wealth of newly minted millionaires and billionaires from the deal — a longer-tail revenue opportunity that feeds directly into the Wealth Management segment that is the most stable and fastest-growing part of the bank’s business mix.

10 Straight EPS Beats + $20 Billion Buyback → Structural Setup
Morgan Stanley has beaten Wall Street’s earnings estimates in each of the last 10 quarters. On June 24, Morgan Stanley announced a $20 billion buyback plan — a capital return authorization of that magnitude signals that management views the current share price as meaningfully below intrinsic value. The consensus EPS estimate has been revised upward 3.3% over the past 30 days, and that revision cycle preceded this morning’s peer beats — meaning the bar may still be beatable even after the upward drift.

Q1 2026: $3.43 EPS, $118 Billion in Net New Wealth Assets → The Baseline
In Q1 2026, Morgan Stanley reported EPS of $3.43 and net revenue of $20.6 billion, topping consensus estimates, driven by Institutional Securities revenue of $10.7 billion, up 19% year-over-year, with equity trading up 25% and fixed-income trading up 29%. Wealth Management delivered $118 billion in net new assets and a pretax profit margin of 34%, while the firm’s return on average tangible common equity hit 27.1%. Q2’s print will be measured against this already-elevated baseline — and what Goldman and JPMorgan reported this morning suggests the trading and capital markets environment that drove Q1 remained constructive through June.

Wealth Management → The Durable Engine Goldman Doesn’t Have
The structural differentiation between Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs is the one that matters most for long-term valuation. Morgan Stanley’s wealth management division, bolstered by the E*Trade and Eaton Vance acquisitions, generates recurring fee-based revenue that smooths quarterly volatility and provides earnings durability that Goldman’s trading-heavy model cannot replicate. With $118 billion in Q1 net new wealth assets and a 34% pretax profit margin in the segment, Wealth Management is both growing rapidly and operating at high efficiency. When Goldman surges 7.7% on a great trading quarter, the read-through to Morgan Stanley includes both the trading upside and the wealth management stability that Goldman’s investors don’t own.

Market Takeaway

Today’s bank earnings sweep has set up tomorrow’s Morgan Stanley print as one of the more favorable pre-announcement environments in recent memory. Five banks beat estimates simultaneously. Goldman delivered a 44% EPS beat on the exact businesses — equity underwriting, capital markets, trading — that Morgan Stanley runs at comparable scale. June CPI came in at 3.5%, below the 3.8% consensus, reducing the probability of a Fed rate hike to 17% from 42% and removing one of the primary macro overhangs on financial sector valuation. The SpaceX IPO fees, the trading volatility generated by the Iran situation, and the M&A pipeline that KBW estimated at 26% growth sector-wide all ran through Morgan Stanley’s income statement in Q2 as surely as they ran through Goldman’s.

The honest risks are worth naming. Oppenheimer analyst Chris Kotowski downgraded Morgan Stanley to Underperform on June 30, the most cautious institutional voice in the current coverage universe — and that note came before this morning’s Goldman print reset expectations. Compensation ratio pressure, which management has flagged explicitly in prior quarters, could compress EPS even against strong revenue — particularly if Goldman’s own compensation accruals set a high-water mark that forces Morgan Stanley to match. IBM collapsed 25% today — its worst day since 1987 — on a software demand warning that raises questions about whether enterprise technology spending is softening in ways that could eventually ripple into commercial lending and advisory pipelines. And a stock up 4.55% on the day before its earnings print has already reflected some of the peer read-through benefit, meaning tomorrow’s tape reaction depends on whether the actual numbers add to the Goldman story or merely confirm it. For readers watching Wednesday’s session, Morgan Stanley is the last major bank standing from this week’s earnings sweep — with a $20 billion buyback, 10 consecutive beats, and a wealth management engine that no pure capital-markets firm can replicate.