Morgan Stanley has experienced a strong performance throughout 2025, with shares climbing from April’s lows near $108 to a peak of approximately $168 in October. This represents a 55% increase over seven months, supported by a consistent ascending trendline.
Recently, a “topping tail” has appeared in the chart at the October highs, indicating a reversal where selling pressure overcame the buyers’ push. Such a pattern after a prolonged rally often indicates trend exhaustion rather than a temporary pause.
Morgan Stanley Shares Trading Analysis
Morgan Stanley shares are currently trading around $162, still above the reliable trendline. If this support breaks decisively, the next likely target is around $139, marking a potential 14% decline from current prices. Increased volume on a breakdown would affirm a change in the trend’s character.
With Morgan Stanley’s business sensitive to market conditions, this technical shift might indicate broader concerns about fourth-quarter trading or transactions. The future trend depends on how the price interacts with the trendline; a bounce could negate the reversal signal, while a break below would suggest a deeper correction may be underway.
After a powerful seven-month rally, we are seeing signs of exhaustion in Morgan Stanley. The stock’s rejection at the $168 level formed a “topping tail,” a signal that sellers are stepping in with force. For now, we are watching the ascending trendline that has supported the stock since April.
The rally this year was fueled by a strong rebound in capital markets, with global M&A volume surging over 25% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2025. However, recent economic data shows a slight cooling, and the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) has crept back up over 17 from its summer lows. This suggests broader market uncertainty that could pressure a bellwether like Morgan Stanley.
Bearish Strategies and Market Signals
For those of us anticipating a breakdown, a break below the key trendline, currently around $159, is the signal to act. We would consider buying put options expiring in January 2026 to give the trade time to work. A move toward the $139 target would make these positions highly profitable.
A more defined bearish strategy is to use a bear put spread to lower the cost of entry. For example, we could buy the December $155 put and simultaneously sell the December $140 put. This creates a position that profits if MS stock falls, with maximum gain realized if it closes below $140 by expiration.
Conversely, if we believe the uptrend will hold, selling premium is the way to play it. We can sell a bull put spread with a short strike below the trendline, perhaps at the $155 level. This strategy profits if the stock stays above our strike price, allowing us to benefit from the stock holding its ground.
We saw a similar technical pattern in Bank of America back in early 2022, where a sharp rally ended with a topping formation that preceded a multi-month decline. That historical precedent reminds us to respect this warning signal. The next few weeks are critical, and our actions will be determined by whether that support line holds or breaks.