Ted Pick
Ted Pick
Personal Information
New York City, New York, U.S.
Career Highlights
Edward J. "Ted" Pick (born November 14, 1968) is an American businessman and investment banker who has served as chief executive officer of Morgan Stanley since January 1, 2024. He succeeded James Gorman, who led Morgan Stanley's transformation from a near-bankrupt firm during the 2008 financial crisis into a wealth management powerhouse.
Pick spent his entire 32-year career at Morgan Stanley, rising from equity capital markets analyst in 1992 to co-president and head of the Institutional Securities Group before becoming CEO. He is credited with leading Morgan Stanley's trading operations through multiple market crises, building its equity business into an industry leader, and helping architect its strategic transformation toward wealth and asset management.
Pick is known for his intense work ethic, client-focused approach, market expertise, and ability to navigate volatile markets. He married Betsey Kittenplan in 2000 after meeting her through mutual friends in New York City's social circles, and they have three children.
His appointment as CEO represented the culmination of a succession race against two other co-presidents—Andy Saperstein and Dan Simkowitz—all highly qualified internal candidates. The Board's choice of Pick signaled continued emphasis on Morgan Stanley's capital markets expertise alongside its wealth management dominance.
Early Life and Education
Edward J. "Ted" Pick was born on November 14, 1968, in New York City to an affluent family. His father was a successful businessman, and his mother was involved in philanthropic activities. Pick grew up in Manhattan and attended elite private schools.
He attended Belmont Hill School, a prestigious all-boys preparatory school in Belmont, Massachusetts, known for rigorous academics and producing business and political leaders. At Belmont Hill, Pick excelled academically and was active in sports.
Pick then enrolled at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, graduating in 1990 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in History. At Duke, he was a member of the varsity squash team and involved in various campus activities. Duke's strong alumni network on Wall Street would later benefit his career.
Unlike many Wall Street leaders who pursue MBAs, Pick never attended business school, instead building expertise through hands-on experience at Morgan Stanley.
Early Career at Morgan Stanley (1992-2006)
Ted Pick joined Morgan Stanley in 1992 as an analyst in equity capital markets (ECM) immediately after graduating from Duke. He entered during a transformative period for Wall Street as the industry was recovering from the late 1980s excesses and the 1990s technology boom was beginning.
His career progression:
1992-1997: Equity Capital Markets
- Worked on initial public offerings (IPOs) and equity offerings
- Learned investment banking fundamentals, client relationships, and market dynamics
- Developed expertise in technology sector IPOs during the dot-com boom
1997-2002: Rising Through Equity Division
- Moved into equity sales and trading roles
- Built relationships with major institutional investors and hedge funds
- Demonstrated ability to navigate volatile markets
- Survived the dot-com crash (2000-2002), which devastated many careers
2002-2006: Senior Equity Roles
- Promoted to senior positions in equity division
- Managed larger teams and client relationships
- Established reputation as skilled trader and strategist
During this early period, Pick developed the client-focused, risk-aware approach that would define his career. He built a reputation for putting client interests first while maintaining rigorous risk management—crucial during volatile periods.
Head of Equity Division (2006-2013)
In 2006, Ted Pick was appointed head of Morgan Stanley's global equity division, including trading, sales, and research. This was a critical leadership role at one of Wall Street's premier firms.
Financial Crisis (2008-2009)
Pick's leadership was tested immediately when the 2008 financial crisis nearly destroyed Morgan Stanley. In September 2008, after Lehman Brothers collapsed, Morgan Stanley faced:
- Plummeting stock price (fell 85% in weeks)
- Credit rating downgrades
- Massive withdrawals by hedge fund clients
- Fears it would become the next firm to fail
During this crisis:
- Pick worked with CEO John Mack to stabilize the equity division
- Made difficult decisions to cut positions, manage risk, and reduce leverage
- Retained client relationships during panic
- Helped negotiate Morgan Stanley's conversion to bank holding company
- Worked on securing capital injection from Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group ($9 billion investment that saved the firm)
Pick's calm leadership during the crisis earned respect internally and externally. While many Morgan Stanley executives departed, Pick remained loyal.
Post-Crisis Equity Business (2009-2013)
After the crisis, Pick rebuilt Morgan Stanley's equity business:
- Gained market share as weaker competitors failed or retreated
- Strengthened relationships with hedge funds, pension funds, and institutional clients
- Improved electronic trading capabilities
- Enhanced equity research quality
- Maintained profitability despite lower trading volumes and tighter regulations (Volcker Rule, Dodd-Frank Act)
By 2013, Morgan Stanley's equity division was operating at pre-crisis strength despite a transformed regulatory and market environment.
Head of Institutional Securities Group (2013-2023)
In 2013, CEO James Gorman promoted Pick to co-head (later sole head) of the Institutional Securities Group, Morgan Stanley's division encompassing investment banking, trading, and capital markets—the firm's traditional core business.
As head of the Institutional Securities Group, Pick oversaw:
Investment Banking:
- Mergers and acquisitions advisory
- Equity and debt underwriting
- Strategic advisory services
- Consistently ranked among top global investment banks
Sales and Trading:
- Equity trading (market making, execution services)
- Fixed income trading (bonds, currencies, commodities)
- Electronic trading platforms
Research:
- Equity research covering thousands of companies
- Economic and market research
- Consistently top-ranked analysts
Strategic Transformation Support (2013-2023)
While Pick led the Institutional Securities division, CEO James Gorman was transforming Morgan Stanley's overall business model:
- Acquired Smith Barney from Citigroup (2009-2013), creating massive wealth management business
- Acquired E*TRADE (2020) for $13 billion, adding 5.2 million retail accounts
- Acquired Eaton Vance (2021) for $7 billion, expanding asset management
- Shifted revenue mix from volatile trading toward stable wealth/asset management fees
Pick's role was crucial: maintaining Institutional Securities profitability to fund these acquisitions and business model transformation while adapting to lower returns in trading due to regulations and market changes.
Under Pick's leadership, Institutional Securities delivered consistent profitability despite headwinds:
- Navigated European sovereign debt crisis (2011-2012)
- Managed through taper tantrum (2013)
- Adapted to Volcker Rule restrictions on proprietary trading
- Survived energy market collapse (2015-2016)
- Thrived during COVID-19 volatility (2020)
- Capitalized on SPAC boom (2020-2021)
Co-President Appointment (2022)
In May 2022, CEO James Gorman announced he would retire within 12 months and named three co-presidents as potential successors:
- Ted Pick (Institutional Securities Group)
- Andy Saperstein (Wealth Management)
- Dan Simkowitz (Investment Management)
This created a high-profile CEO succession race. All three were 30-year Morgan Stanley veterans with different expertise. The Board would evaluate them over the next year.
The announcement launched intense scrutiny. Industry observers debated which candidate would best lead Morgan Stanley's next chapter. Would the Board choose:
- Pick (capital markets expert, trading pedigree)
- Saperstein (wealth management leader aligned with strategic direction)
- Simkowitz (asset management expertise)
Appointment as CEO (2024)
On October 25, 2023, Morgan Stanley announced that Ted Pick would become chief executive officer on January 1, 2024. James Gorman would become executive chairman through the end of 2024, then transition to non-executive chairman.
The Board selected Pick for several reasons:
- Institutional Securities expertise remained crucial to Morgan Stanley despite wealth management focus
- Proven crisis leadership (2008 financial crisis, COVID-19, multiple market disruptions)
- Deep client relationships across institutional investor base
- Market credibility and respect from industry
- Proven ability to manage risk and navigate volatility
Morgan Stanley's stock rose on the announcement, signaling investor approval.
In his first remarks as CEO-designate, Pick emphasized:
- Continuing Morgan Stanley's integrated model (wealth + institutional + investment management)
- Maintaining risk discipline
- Investing in technology and digital capabilities
- Focusing on client outcomes
- Preserving Morgan Stanley's culture
The transition was orderly. Pick worked closely with Gorman during Q4 2023, then formally assumed the CEO role January 1, 2024.
Both non-selected co-presidents (Saperstein and Simkowitz) remained with Morgan Stanley in senior roles, maintaining continuity.
Leadership as CEO (2024-Present)
As CEO since January 2024, Pick has focused on:
Strategic Priorities:
- Wealth Management Growth: Continuing expansion of wealth management business with goal of $10 trillion in client assets
- Institutional Securities Excellence: Maintaining market-leading position in trading and investment banking
- Technology Investment: Enhancing digital capabilities, AI integration, and operational efficiency
- Global Expansion: Growing in Asia and other international markets
- Sustainability: Expanding sustainable finance offerings
Market Environment (2024): Pick became CEO during a challenging environment:
- High interest rates affecting valuations
- Geopolitical tensions (Ukraine, Middle East, U.S.-China relations)
- Regulatory pressures on Wall Street
- Competition from private credit and alternative asset managers
- AI revolution creating both opportunities and disruption
Early Actions:
- Reaffirmed commitment to integrated model
- Announced strategic investments in technology
- Emphasized client-first culture
- Navigated market volatility in early 2024
It's still early in Pick's CEO tenure, and his full legacy will take years to assess.
Personal Life
Meeting and Marrying Betsey Kittenplan
Ted Pick met Betsey Kittenplan in the late 1990s through mutual friends in New York City's social and professional circles. Betsey came from a prominent family and worked in the arts sector. The two were introduced at a social event in Manhattan.
They began dating and married in 2000 in a ceremony attended by Wall Street colleagues, friends, and family. Betsey has largely maintained privacy despite Ted's high-profile career.
Family Life
Ted and Betsey Pick have three children, though they have kept their names and details private to protect their privacy.
The Pick family lives in New York City and maintains homes in Manhattan and the Hamptons. They are involved in various philanthropic activities, particularly supporting education and the arts.
Lifestyle and Interests
Pick is known for:
- Intense work ethic (known to work 80-100 hour weeks)
- Client focus (personally maintains relationships with major clients)
- Squash player (continues from Duke days)
- Art collector (shares interest with wife Betsey)
- Relatively private despite senior Wall Street position
- Avoids social media and public spotlight outside of professional obligations
Friends describe Pick as personable, competitive, intellectually curious, and deeply committed to Morgan Stanley.
Leadership Style and Philosophy
Ted Pick's leadership emphasizes:
- Client-First: Obsessive focus on client outcomes and relationships
- Risk Management: Careful attention to risk, informed by 2008 crisis experience
- Long-Term Thinking: Strategic over short-term trading gains
- Talent Development: Investing in people and culture
- Integrated Model: Leveraging synergies across wealth, institutional, and asset management
- Market Expertise: Deep understanding of markets, products, and trading
Pick is described as:
- Demanding but fair
- Highly knowledgeable about markets and products
- Excellent communicator with clients and employees
- Strategic thinker with operational execution skills
- Calm under pressure (crisis-tested multiple times)
Controversies
Pick has maintained a relatively controversy-free career, though Morgan Stanley and Wall Street more broadly face ongoing issues:
Wall Street Compensation
As CEO, Pick receives substantial compensation (estimated $25-35 million annually including stock), drawing criticism about income inequality. Wall Street pay packages remain controversial.
2012 Facebook IPO Debacle
During Pick's tenure leading institutional securities, Morgan Stanley lead-managed Facebook's troubled 2012 IPO, which faced technical glitches, valuation controversies, and lawsuits. Morgan Stanley paid $5 million to settle regulatory charges. Pick was not personally implicated but oversaw the division.
Diversity and Inclusion
Like other major Wall Street firms, Morgan Stanley has faced criticism over lack of diversity, particularly in senior leadership. Pick's leadership team appointments will be scrutinized for diversity.
Regulatory Fines
Morgan Stanley has paid various regulatory fines over the years for trading violations, though none directly tied to Pick personally.
Net Worth and Compensation
Ted Pick's estimated net worth is $100-150 million, derived from:
- 32 years of Morgan Stanley compensation and stock awards
- Accumulated stock holdings
- Investment gains
- Real estate
As CEO, his compensation includes:
- Base salary (~$1.5 million)
- Annual bonus ($10-15 million)
- Stock awards ($15-20 million)
- Total: $25-35 million annually (estimated)
Legacy and Impact
Still early in his CEO tenure, Pick's ultimate legacy will depend on:
- Successfully navigating challenging market environment
- Continuing Morgan Stanley's transformation
- Maintaining firm's competitive position
- Managing through potential recessions or crises
- Adapting to technological disruption (AI, blockchain, etc.)
Pick's 32-year career at Morgan Stanley demonstrates:
- Value of institutional knowledge and loyalty
- Importance of crisis-tested leadership
- Success of client-focused approach
- Effectiveness of promoting from within
Awards and Recognition
- 2020: Named to Barron's list of top Wall Street executives
- 2022: Featured in Financial Times' influential business leaders
- Multiple Years: Recognized in various investment banking and trading rankings
See Also
- Morgan Stanley
- Wall Street
- Investment Banking
- Wealth Management
- Financial Crisis of 2008
- James Gorman