Morgan Stanley taps BlackRock to help lure $2T of assets

Morgan Stanley’s $2.4 trillion wealth-management unit has turned to BlackRock for an edge in technology as it seeks to get its clients to move all their assets to the bank.

The firm has been working for two years to integrate Aladdin, BlackRock’s risk-management system, into its platforms, according to Andy Saperstein, co-head of Morgan Stanley’s wealth-management unit. The technology can identify assets that are outliers based on an owner’s risk appetite and show clients “risks that they didn’t even know where they were taking,” he says.

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Pedestrians walk outside Morgan Stanley headquarters in New York, U.S., on Thursday, July 19, 2012. Morgan Stanley reported a 50 percent drop in earnings and said it will cut more jobs as revenue from trading stocks and bonds declined the most among Wall Street banks. Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg

Morgan Stanley is highlighting other brokerages’ inability to provide the same analysis as it looks to attract the $2 trillion that its clients have at other institutions, Saperstein says.

“We’ve just never given them a real good reason to consolidate those assets with us,” Saperstein said at a conference in New York Tuesday hosted by Deutsche Bank. “Now, they have a reason and we can quantify that benefit for them.”

Wall Street’s money managers are in an arms race for technology that will help them gain market share, while also making the case that those programs can’t replace their workforces. Morgan Stanley has more than 15,000 brokers and is working on machine-learning algorithms that can take over routine tasks.

UBS partnered with BlackRock last year to use Aladdin to help analyze portfolios at its wealth-management unit, which has $2.7 trillion in invested assets globally. Morgan Stanley also has what it calls an “asset aggregation” tool that lets people view their assets online to help financial advisers with wealth planning.

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“Other firms have and will look to leverage Aladdin," Saperstein says. “However, no firm has even begun to spend the time or money to integrate it into their platform.”

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