At Morgan Stanley’s U.S. Financials Conference, executives across banking, consumer finance and asset management pointed to an industry that remains fundamentally sound, supported by stable credit quality, healthy balance sheets and improving capital markets activity—even as interest rates stay higher for longer and macro uncertainty persists.
But conversations also highlighted a more nuanced picture:
- In consumer finance, spending and credit trends are broadly stable, but firms cited the gap between higher- and lower-income households—and the potential impact of inflation, particularly energy costs.
- Across alternative asset management, executives described a massive, multi-year capital cycle tied to artificial intelligence, with firms deploying capital into AI infrastructure—data centers, energy and compute—while also becoming more disciplined in managing risks tied to that buildout.
- For banks and capital markets, activity is beginning to recover, with momentum in equity and investment-grade debt issuance. At the same time, institutions are navigating a more competitive deposit environment, evolving their business models and accelerating the use of AI to drive efficiency and client engagement.
“The backdrop for financial institutions remains constructive, but the forces shaping the industry are becoming more complex,” says John Esposito, Global Co-Head of the Financial Institutions Group in Morgan Stanley Investment Banking. “We’re seeing improving activity across capital markets and continued strength in the consumer, alongside a major shift in how capital is being deployed—particularly into AI infrastructure and private credit. How that buildout unfolds, alongside the path of rates and the durability of the consumer, will be critical in shaping the next phase of growth across the industry.”
Consumer Finance: Resilient Yet Segmented
A recurring theme across panel discussions was the resilience of the U.S. consumer. Credit performance is stable, supported by a still-healthy labor market and steady income growth. Spending has held up particularly well in discretionary categories such as travel, dining and entertainment, reinforcing optimism in the near-term outlook. That stability is also giving financial institutions greater confidence to deploy capital into growth areas, from lending to premium consumer segments and new product development.
