Morgan Stanley is keeping a positive view on stocks even as a global energy disruption stretches into its third month. The bank is maintaining an overweight position on equities, meaning it recommends holding more stocks than a standard portfolio benchmark would suggest.
Analyst Seth Carpenter laid out three main reasons for this stance: growth in AI-related capital spending, consumer spending driven by accumulated wealth, and a gradual return to full employment. The bank believes these factors are enough to support economic growth heading into next year.

The firm published its view as part of its midyear strategy outlook, flagging that the baseline case still points to recovery — but only if conditions don’t worsen.
Morgan Stanley is not without concern. Carpenter warned that if oil prices climb well above current levels, or if the energy disruption lasts another quarter, “the macro narrative will shift.”
The bank’s current forecast has oil prices falling back to $90 per barrel by the end of 2026. That would help ease inflation pressures and give the Federal Reserve more room to act.
On interest rates, Morgan Stanley expects the Fed to hold steady for the rest of 2026. The thinking is that by year-end, tariff-related inflation and oil-driven price pressures should ease enough to provide clarity. That could open the door to two rate cuts in the first half of 2027.
Despite the constructive tone, the bank acknowledged that tail risks — low-probability but high-impact events — may be more serious than markets currently price in. An extended energy shock could tip the economy into recession.
Morgan Stanley has a market cap of around $304 billion. The firm manages $9.3 trillion in client assets and operates across 42 countries with more than 82,000 employees.
Its GF Score, a stock ranking metric from GuruFocus, sits at 76 out of 100. The company scores well on growth at 8 out of 10, but financial strength comes in low at 2 out of 10, largely due to high debt levels.
The stock’s price-to-earnings ratio is currently 17.47, slightly above its historical median.
Insider activity is worth watching. Over the past three months, company insiders sold $17.7 million worth of Morgan Stanley shares. No insider purchases were recorded in the same period.
The bank’s position remains, in its own words, “constructive, though not complacent.”
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