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Morgan StanleyMorgan Stanley is an investment bank founded in New York on September 5, 1935. It was split off from JP Morgan in order to comply with the provisions of the Glass-Steagall Act. On February 5, 1997 the company announced a merger with Dean Witter Discover and Company, the spun-off financial services business of Sears Roebuck. The merged company was briefly known as "Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Discover & Co. " until 1998 and then "Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co." until late 2001. Misleading financial analysis was disclosed amongst investment banks in the United Kingdom, but Sir Howard Davies, chairman of the UK Financial Services Authority, decided not to intervene. Davies was also an employee of the bank. In criminal activity in the US similar to that alleged in the UK, Morgan Stanley was fined $125m. On July 12, 2004, Morgan Stanley settled a sex discrimination suit brought by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for $54 million. On January 12, 2005, The New York Stock Exchange imposed a $19 million fine on Morgan Stanley, for regulatory and supervisory lapses. Recent (2005) Disputes Concerned over lackluster performance, eight former senior Morgan Stanley executives, including S. Parker Gilbert, who had been chairman of Morgan Stanley before the merger, and Robert Scott, who had been CEO, sent a letter to the Board on March 3, 2005 requesting immediate replacement of Phil Purcell, CEO of Morgan Stanley. On March 31, they published a full-page advertisement in the Wall Street Journal revealing their position. Phil Purcell is known for being the management consultant who advised Sears to purchase Dean Witter and then becoming CEO of Dean Witter. At the time of the acquisition, Purcell had no securities experience. After Sears bought Dean Witter, he presided over 20 years of decline at Dean Witter, which fell from a strong position in the top ten (by many security industry ratings standards) into the top 25. In addition, while Citibank's credit card business swelled from 20 million to 120 million cards between 1985 and 2005, the Discover Card over which Dean Witter presided stagnated. The credit card growth that did occur did so at Sears, where 30 million credit cards have been sold. The dispute, which the eight former executives claim represents a groundswell within the company, concerns Phil Purcell's similar neglect for Morgan Stanley's traditional and most profitable institutionally ingrained business: investment banking. Key to the firm's future is Joe Perella, the head of investment banking and former head of acquisitions at CSFB (Credit Suisse First Boston). Perella joined Bruce Wasserstein to form the former "Wasserella" specialist firm, which manages the critical investment banking dept at Morgan Stanley. For the moment, Perella backs Purcell. Organization Morgan Stanley is comprised of four main business units: - Institutional Securities
- Individual Investor Group
- Investment Management
- Credit Services
Diversity - Morgan Stanley was named one of the 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers in 2004 by Working Mothers magazine.
- Family Digest magazine named Morgan Stanley one of the "Best Companies for African Americans" in June 2004
- Essence magazine named Morgan Stanley as one of the "30 Great Places to Work" in May 2004
- Asian Enterprise magazine named Morgan Stanley as one of the "Top Companies for Asian Americans" in April 2004
- Hispanic magazine selected Morgan Stanley as one of the "100 Companies Providing the Most Opportunities to Hispanics" in February 2004
See Also External Links References - Hibbard, J. (17 January 2005). Morgan Stanley: No stars—and lots of top tech IPOs. In BusinessWeek, 56 – 58.
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