
Morgan Stanley is set to cut around 2,500 jobs globally despite reporting record revenues last year, highlighting growing tension between strong financial performance and ongoing cost-cutting across the banking sector.
The Wall Street giant plans to reduce its workforce by roughly 3 per cent across several divisions, including investment banking and trading, wealth management and investment management. The reductions, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, were understood to have begun earlier this week.
The cuts come despite the bank posting one of the strongest financial performances in its history. Morgan Stanley reported annual revenues of $70.65 billion for the year, representing a 14 per cent increase compared with the previous year. Net income rose even more sharply, climbing 26 per cent to $16.9 billion.
Sources familiar with the restructuring said the layoffs were linked to shifting business priorities, location adjustments and performance reviews rather than a single strategic overhaul.
Unlike some previous rounds of restructuring in the financial sector, the bank’s wealth management financial advisers are understood not to have been affected by the job cuts. Instead, reductions are concentrated in support roles and operational teams across several departments.
The bank has not publicly linked the job cuts to artificial intelligence, although speculation has intensified across the financial industry about whether new technologies are beginning to reshape white-collar employment.
Morgan Stanley’s chief executive, Ted Pick, has previously spoken about the transformative potential of artificial intelligence across the firm’s operations.
Speaking to investors last year, Pick said AI could save financial advisers between 10 and 15 hours each week by automating administrative tasks such as transcribing client meetings and logging key details into internal databases.
“This is potentially really game-changing,” he said at the time.
The bank has been developing tools that automatically capture information from client conversations, generate summaries and suggest tailored investment strategies based on a client’s profile and portfolio history.
Executives believe such systems could improve productivity significantly, enabling advisers to spend more time with clients while reducing administrative overheads.
Morgan Stanley’s job cuts come amid a broader wave of corporate restructuring across the global technology and financial sectors as companies invest more heavily in artificial intelligence.
Several major companies have already linked workforce reductions directly to AI adoption.
At Amazon, the company recently announced plans to cut around 14,000 corporate roles. Senior vice-president of people experience and technology Beth Galetti said generative AI would fundamentally reshape how the company operates.
“We’re convinced that we need to be organised more leanly, with fewer layers and more ownership,” Galetti wrote in a company blog post announcing the layoffs.
Similarly, Marc Benioff revealed last year that his company had eliminated roughly 4,000 customer-support roles after deploying AI systems capable of handling many service enquiries automatically.
More recently, technology entrepreneur Jack Dorsey said his payments company Block would cut nearly half of its workforce, amounting to around 4,000 jobs.
Dorsey said the decision was part of a broader transformation driven by what he described as “intelligence tools” that enable companies to operate with smaller, flatter teams.
“We’re going to build this company with intelligence at the core of everything we do,” he said in an internal memo.
Many argue that several large corporations expanded rapidly during the pandemic and are now adjusting staffing levels after years of aggressive hiring.
Some Wall Street analysts have suggested that banks and technology companies may be using AI as a convenient explanation for workforce reductions that are primarily driven by cost management or changing market conditions.
In Morgan Stanley’s case, the job cuts come after several years of strong hiring across wealth management and investment banking operations.
The bank has significantly expanded its wealth management arm since acquiring brokerage firm E*TRADE in 2020 and asset manager Eaton Vance later that year, moves that transformed the company’s business model and boosted its client base.
The decision to reduce headcount despite record revenues reflects a broader trend among global banks seeking to balance profitability with operational efficiency.
Investment banks have faced volatile deal-making conditions in recent years, with mergers and acquisitions activity fluctuating as interest rates rose sharply in 2023 and 2024.
Although markets have stabilised more recently, many financial institutions remain cautious about long-term staffing levels as economic conditions remain uncertain.
For Morgan Stanley, the latest restructuring appears aimed at ensuring the bank remains competitive while continuing to invest heavily in digital infrastructure and AI tools.
As financial institutions increasingly integrate automation into core operation, from trading systems to client management platform, the industry is likely to see continued debate about whether artificial intelligence will ultimately augment human roles or gradually replace them.
For now, Morgan Stanley’s latest move underscores a reality that is becoming more common across global finance: strong revenues do not necessarily translate into job security as companies restructure to adapt to technological change and evolving market dynamics.
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Morgan Stanley to axe 2,500 jobs despite record revenues
