
Morgan Stanley's Top Asia Banker Targets $10 Billion in Revenue
(Bloomberg) -- Last month, as the US-China trade war heated up, Morgan Stanley's co-President Dan Simkowitz made a discreet visit to Beijing. It was the first time a senior US executive from the bank had stepped foot in China in five years, and came days after a rare board meeting in Tokyo near the Imperial Palace.
The low-key events underscore the focus the Wall Street giant is putting on Asia under recently installed Chief Executive Officer Ted Pick. After several tough years sparked by a slump in China that hammered global banks, Morgan Stanley is regaining traction in the region.
Led by one of the deepest and longest-tenured teams of any of its rivals, Morgan Stanley posted record Asia revenue of $7.64 billion last year, topping arch-rival Goldman Sachs Group Inc. for the third-straight time. The bank is now eyeing $10 billion in revenue within five years, its Asia chief Gokul Laroia said in a rare interview from his Hong Kong office.
'If you're diversified by geography and you're diversified by product, you have inherent hedges in your business,' said Laroia, who joined Simkowitz on the Beijing trip to meet with He Lifeng, the vice premier who is also leading US trade talks. 'A combination of familiarity and confidence in the team over here is super helpful, particularly when times are tough.'
The bank is counting on a widening array of investment banking and trading initiatives across the region. A growing presence in Japan and India will likely add to a China business that's slowly recovering even as trade wars rage.
Still, the goal will be challenging. Despite investing billions, global banks have struggled to make meaningful profits on the Chinese mainland, squeezed by a sluggish economy and powerful local rivals. At the same time, the bank faces fierce competition in Japan, where many global firms saw sliding revenue last year. In India, fees are generally low and the regulatory landscape is hard to navigate.
Laroia, a 30-year veteran of Morgan Stanley and co-head of global equities, is in charge of executing the Asia strategy. He joins a long list of top executives at the New York bank who cut their teeth in the region.
At the top is Pick, a New Yorker who worked in Korea for about six months early in his career. At a town hall last year after becoming CEO, Pick joked that the two people he's traveled most with in his life are his wife and Laroia. In the past two decades, Pick has made more than 60 trips to Asia. Simkowitz, who oversees the global institutional securities business, worked in Tokyo and Hong Kong in the 1990s, while Mo Assomull, co-head of investment banking, grew up in Hong Kong where he first joined the bank.
Laroia is part of the bank's 12-member top executive body. His close ties to the top have been instrumental in helping the firm's bankers in Asia secure swift approvals and push key deals across the line, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified. He's led businesses across investment banking and sales and trading, making him one of the most well-rounded regional CEOs among global banks in Asia.
During the bank's April earnings call, Pick gave a rare shout-out to Laroia, pointing to Asia's equities performance and its contribution to global results. Like its biggest US rivals, Morgan Stanley's stocks division is the backbone of Asia, and its momentum is pushing Greater China's share to about half of regional revenue. Overall, Japan delivers 20% to 25%, while India makes up roughly 10%, a person familiar with the matter said. In the first quarter, the bank's revenue from Asia topped Goldman's by 27%, public filings show.
Morgan Stanley declined to comment on contributions by geography.
While activity is picking up, Wall Street firms have gone through tough years following China's financial opening at the start of the decade. Since late 2022, Morgan Stanley has slashed more than 120 Asia investment banking jobs — many of then China-focused — as overall Asia revenue fell before rebounding in 2024, according to people familiar with the matter.
Now, fresh China-US tension has again fueled investor caution, imperiling growth prospects for most investment banks.
'The geopolitical dynamic is a complicated one,' said Laroia. 'Our role is to make sure that the business that we're doing in China is the risk that we're comfortable managing.'
To confront the challenges in China, Laroia draws on challenges from navigating five major economic meltdowns, including the Asian financial turmoil and dot-com bust, SARS, the global financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic.
He tapped that experience earlier this year as US President Donald Trump's tariff shock caused Chinese stocks to plummet. Laroia kept in close phone contact with a leading hedge fund in London. He advised sticking with China, but to cut long-dated investments and avoid complex positions to preserve liquidity, according to the $10 billion portfolio manager, who asked not to be identified.
The long-time client said that the bank has generally provided better access to borrowable Chinese shares, citing one instance when its prime brokerage unit offered twice as many as rivals for short bets. This allows the bank to charge premiums in illiquid markets, the hedge fund manager said.
Morgan Stanley has made a deliberate push to broaden its product suite across businesses in China to counter the deals slump. Its onshore units have secured multiple licenses from derivatives to principal trading and research in the last few years.
'The sales and trading business continues to grow because there's a very broad cross section of global investors and increasingly a rapidly growing pool of local capital that is trading these markets more actively than they've traded in the past,' Laroia said.
Morgan Stanley is also counting on Japan for growth, as the economy emerges from decades of stagnation. The Tokyo board meeting was the first in the region in 14 years. Much of the discussion centered on regional goals and expansion, underscoring Asia's importance to the bank's strategy, a person familiar said.
The firm has deepened its 17-year partnership with Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., its largest shareholder. Beyond banking and trading, it merged research with MUFG to compete with local firms and expanded mid- and small-cap Tokyo stock coverage by two-thirds to more than 500 names. New growth levers include a tie-up with MUFG in foreign exchange and equities and a push into private credit.
Still, hiring in Japan's booming finance sector is a headache, with fierce competition and talent shortages driving up pay.
In India, where Laroia was born, the firm has launched foreign exchange capabilities to help investors trade and hedge currencies. It was an early mover in a special economic zone — known as GIFT City - designed to attract global clients seeking tax and regulatory clarity when trading Indian securities.
It also faces competition from Goldman, JPMorgan Chase & Co and others, who are all ramping up in India, chasing deals and expanding corporate lending and flow business. Despite a surge in deals, investment banking in India remains a relatively low-margin business, prompting the bank to be selective in taking on fee-paying clients.
While it has a big ultra-high-net-worth business in Hong Kong and Singapore, Morgan Stanley has yet to enter other core markets like Japan and India, and it's unclear if it will leverage its US mass-wealth model there.
Asset management has also lagged, as the firm only started ramping up in 2023, hiring Mike Levin from Goldman to lead Asia distribution. Last year's departure of Chin Chou, the founder of its Asia private equity arm, has also left a leadership gap as global investors pulled back from China.
For Laroia, the volatility and tumult comes with the territory in Asia, leading to plenty of tough moments and pressure. His once black hair has turned gray and white over the years, and he finds golf helps him stay grounded. With a handicap of just eight, he's good enough to beat a few of his clients if chooses to.
'The only time I shout is on a golf course, when I miss or hit a bad shot,' said Laroia, who plays at the Hong Kong Golf Club and Discovery Bay. 'That's how you release your stress.'
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Indias agrochemical exports set for moderate rebound in FY25: Rubix report
New Delhi [India], June 22 (ANI): India's agrochemical exports are expected to moderately rebound in the Financial Year 2025, with improving demand and inventory normalisation, according to an industry report by Rubix, which analyses industry data and trends. India's agrochemical exports declined sharply in FY2024, by nearly 22 per cent compared to the previous year, primarily due to global inventory destocking, heightened price competition from China, and subdued demand in key export markets. The report says that distributors worldwide reduced procurement to manage excess stock amid falling prices. At the same time, Chinese suppliers re-entered the market with aggressively priced products, making Indian exports less competitive. Additionally, erratic weather patterns impacted agricultural activity in importing countries, further dampening demand. However, exports are expected to recover in the coming years as global inventories stabilise, demand picks up with improved agricultural cycles, and Indian manufacturers adapt with cost-efficient production and diversified portfolios. As a result, the trade surplus (difference between exports and imports) came down from USD 3.6 billion in FY2023 and USD 2.8 billion in FY2024 to USD 2.3 billion in FY2025 (April 2024- February 2025). Highlighting the factors that support exports, the report added that herbicides have emerged as the leading export segment, experiencing the fastest growth at 20 per cent CAGR from FY2020 to FY2025. The share of herbicides in total agrochemical exports increased from 31 per cent to 37 per cent during the same timeframe. As per the report, this growth is driven by India's cost-effective manufacturing, rising global demand for affordable herbicides, and the increasing scarcity and cost of agricultural labour, making herbicide-based weed control a more viable choice for farmers. The export landscape reveals a growing concentration in key markets, as the top five export destinations account for more than 50 per cent share for insecticides and fungicides and nearly 71 per cent for herbicides. Notably, the US and Brazil have maintained their positions as the top export destinations for insecticides and fungicides over the past five years. However, in FY2025, Japan displaced Brazil as the second-largest export destination for herbicides. (ANI)


Mint
2 hours ago
- Mint
Hong Kong Stock Rally Shakes Up Investor Playbook for China
Wall Street entered 2025 with bullish bets on onshore Chinese stocks, counting on Beijing's stimulus drive to cushion the blow from US tariffs. Six months in, they couldn't have been more wrong. Blame it on the breakthrough by DeepSeek in artificial intelligence that suddenly turned the tide in favor of Chinese shares listed in Hong Kong. With persistent economic woes battering the onshore market, the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index has beaten the CSI 300 Index by nearly 20 percentage points so far in 2025, heading for the biggest annual outperformance in two decades. Strategists at Julius Baer Group Ltd. and Morgan Stanley are among those expecting the Hong Kong market's lead to continue. A slew of new hot listings, including bubble tea maker Mixue Group and battery giant Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., has reignited global interest toward the financial hub and expanded investment options. Mainland investors have poured nearly $90 billion into Hong Kong stocks this year, already nearing 90% of the whole amount for 2024. The sector structure in Hong Kong 'is also becoming more comprehensive with recent listings and upcoming IPOs,' said Richard Tang, China strategist at Julius Baer. 'H-shares are likely to continue outperforming A-shares driven by global rebalancing flows and strong Southbound flows,' he added, referring to Hong Kong and mainland-listed stocks, respectively. As the Hang Seng China gauge has gained 17% this year, the CSI 300 Index has shed more than 2%. Analysts attribute the weakness to the onshore market's composition — heavy on property, financial and traditional consumption stocks — which are more reliant on domestic demand. Tech heavyweights including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. are listed in Hong Kong. Despite China's unexpectedly strong retail sales in May, deflationary forces and a housing slump persist. Even as trade tensions continue to simmer, the big bang stimulus from Beijing that some investors had hoped for has yet to materialize. A key source of support for the A-share market has also subsided. After actively propping up stocks early April as tariff shocks hit, state funds have been notably absent, according to Bloomberg's analysis of exchange-traded funds purchased by Central Huijin Investment. Meanwhile, things have been coming together for Hong Kong. HSBC Holdings Plc expects mainlanders' purchases via the southbound stock connect to reach $180 billion this year, an unprecedented amount. Read: What's Behind China's Listing Frenzy in Hong Kong?: QuickTake A reassessment of China's tech potential has driven a re-rating of stocks in Hong Kong. The Hang Seng China gauge now trades at 9.3 times its forward earnings estimates, above a five-year average of 8.5 and sharply higher than the 2024 low near a ratio of six. 'More single-stock opportunities related to AI and new consumption, particularly the larger caps, are listed in Hong Kong,' Morgan Stanley strategist Laura Wang wrote in a note earlier this month. 'Some of the long-term well-liked A-share companies are choosing to come to Hong Kong for dual-listing.' The steep underperformance of A-shares, however, means there may be room for catch-up. The premium that onshore stocks have long commanded over Hong Kong peers has narrowed to about 30%, below a five-year average of around 42%. Fiscal stimulus could revive interest in beaten-down sectors onshore, such as consumer staples. There's also an array of hardware tech firms that should benefit from Beijing's push for self sufficiency. 'A-shares still have investment appeal,' said Agnes Ng, portfolio specialist at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. 'If China's economic growth slows in the second half and stimulus is deployed, A-shares would benefit directly.' Yet the limited pool of attractive megacap stocks onshore means the recovery will once again hinge on if and when Beijing will deploy greater stimulus. That lingering uncertainty will likely keep investors favoring Hong Kong for the time being. 'H-shares are typically higher beta due to the index make-up — and in an up year are likely to outperform,' said Robert Mumford, investment advisor at GAM Investments. 'The end-goal of a range of policy stimulus is to increase consumption, which is the core underlying business of the internet platform companies. Hence we are more positive on H shares versus A.' This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
2 hours ago
- First Post
With a 2-hr closed-door meeting, Trump may have made it difficult for Asim Munir
While their meeting has been seen as a sign of US-Pakistan bonhomie, US President Donald Trump might have put Pakistani Army chief Asim Munir in a difficult position: Munir risks compromising ties with China with the turn to the United States and Trump's demands go against longstanding Pakistani foreign policy. read more Pakistan's Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir salutes after laying wreath on the martyrs' monument during a guard of honour ceremony at General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi. AFP While their meeting is definitely a sign of the brewing US-Pakistan bonhomie, US President Donald Trump appears to have put Pakistani Army chief Field Marshall Asim Munir in a difficult spot: while Trump's offerings are generous, his demands are taxing and risk compromising longstanding Pakistani position. Trump held a two-hour-long meeting with Munir on Wednesday, which was seen as a breakthrough in the US-Pakistan relationship. For one, Trump wants Pakistan to distance itself from China and pivot to the United States. That is a non-starter for Pakistan as China is invested so much in the country economically, politically, and militarily that distancing is not just infeasible but unthinkable. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD However, Trump's outreach to Pakistan —and offers— don't come for free. The risks for Munir are also substantial. Trump puts Munir in difficult spot While Trump made generous offers to Munir, he also sought substantial returns on his investment. Trump sought Pakistan's military bases and seaports from Munir in exchange for fifth-generation fighter planes, significant financial aid, and new trade and security deals, according to CNN-News 18. Trump told Munir that the offer rests on the condition that Pakistan would curtain dealings with China and Russia. A source further said that Trump would want Pakistan to be on the US side if he would decide to join Israel in attacking Iran. ALSO READ: Trump wants military bases from Munir, offers security-trade deals in US-Pak reset: Report While Trump's offerings are great, they put Munir in a tough spot as accepting these offers would mean diluting yearslong relationship with Pakistan and undoing the longstanding policy regarding Israel. Consider these facts: China accounts for around 23 of all Pakistan's trade, China is the largest source of foreign investment in Pakistan with a share of around 40 per cent, and just one project, China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), adds 2-2.5 per cent of Pakistan's economy. Moreover, while Pakistan has historically used Western weapons, the military has been increasingly armed by China in recent years . In the past five years, around 80 per cent of Pakistan's military imports have been from China. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD With such dependence, it is impractical —if not impossible— for Munir to curtail ties and engagement with China and replace it with the United States as the principal partner of the United States. But, once you have had an audience with Trump and received such offers, it is not easy to bluntly say no. That means that either Munir would lose face in front of Trump by refusing the offers or he would try to reach middle ground that could upset both Trump and Xi Jinping of China. Trump seeks reset in US-Pakistan ties With his meeting with Munir, Trump has made it clear that he is seeking a reset in US-Pakistan ties. In an unprecedented meeting that lays bare who truly runs Pakistan, Trump held a meeting at the White House with Munir on Wednesday. This was the first time a President of the United States held a direct, formal meeting with a Pakistani army chief. Three previous army chiefs, Ayub Khan, Zia-ul-Haq, and Pervez Musharraf, held meetings with the US president but only when they were heads of state while running a military regime after a coup — not in capacity as army chiefs. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The reset in US-Pakistan relationship has come at a time when Trump's policies and actions have soured times with India . He has not just continued to falsely claim mediation in the India-Pakistan conflict last month but has also hyphenated India and Pakistan, intervened in the Kashmir dispute, and made deals with jihadists from West Asia to South Asia that adversely affect India's security interests. ALSO READ: Beyond Pakistan: Trump's open embrace of jihadist forces across Asia a new headache for India However, as mentioned above, Trump is not making offers but also seeking substantial returns. South Asia analyst Michael Kugelman describes it as a 'classic Trump' give-and-take approach. 'There's been US-Pakistan engagement on crypto, minerals and counter-terrorism, and Trump takes a deep personal interest in all of these. This is classic Trump: 'What can you do for me? What can I get out of this?' Kugelman, a Senior Fellow at Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, told Guardian. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD