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Morgan Stanley is looking to staff up its stock research unit with crypto talent

Frank Chaparro   

Morgan Stanley is looking to staff up its stock research unit with crypto talent
Finance2 min read

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  • Morgan Stanley is looking to add those with knowledge of the cryptocurrency world to its stock research team.
  • The bank's chief executive has had a more positive view of bitcoin and crypto than other Wall Street heads.

Morgan Stanley appears to be stepping up its game when it comes to cryptocurrency.

The Wall Street giant's three most recent job postings for equity research positions on LinkedIn say "knowledge of cryptocurrency is a plus." The associate/analyst positions are for three separate coverage areas including payments, communications equipment, and MLPs, or master limited partnerships.

Equity analysts are the folks who study the fundamentals of companies in a given sector and then create research, which clients can use to help inform investment decisions.

Morgan Stanley already produces research on the cryptocurrency and blockchain space. A note penned by James Faucette earlier this month, for instance, explored how cryptocurrency could impact the payments industry.

"Bitcoin has emerged as a growing focal point within the payments industry, both for its disruptive potential as well as the potential costs savings that blockchain may help unlock," the bank wrote.

And in January, analysts at the bank said energy demand to mine cryptocurrencies "may represent a new business opportunity for renewable energy developers."

The market for digital currencies exploded in 2017 from a mere $17 billion to an all-time high above $800 billion at the beginning of 2018.

Throughout that time-period Wall Street icons from Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan to Larry Fink of BlackRock derided bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, as a tool useful only for money laundering. Dimon famously called bitcoin a "fraud."

Morgan Stanley's James Gorman took a less critical stance on bitcoin. In September, Gorman said he thought bitcoin was "certainly more than just a fad."

"It's obviously highly speculative, but it's not something that's inherently bad," he added.

Jonathan Pruzan, the bank's chief financial officer, said in early January the bank was clearing bitcoin futures trades made on Cboe Global Markets and CME Group.

"If someone wants to trade on the futures and settle in cash, we'll do that," Pruzan told Bloomberg.

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