Morgan Stanley’s Mike Wilson on Contrarian Calls And Conviction

Mike Wilson was uneasy, just as he likes it.

It was April, and President Donald Trump’s trade war had roiled financial markets, making Morgan Stanley’s chief US equity strategist a sought-after TV guest. The studio lights didn’t faze the Wall Street veteran. He’s used to those, thanks to dozens of appearances across business news networks as he rose to prominence in recent years. Talking on TV comes with the strategist’s job.

In a bold move, he stuck to his view that US stocks would rally in the second half, while competitors up and down Wall Street were tearing up their bullish forecasts. That left him virtually alone among his peers in a business where the job can feel safest when you go with the flow. They can’t fire me, it’s easy to think, if I’m saying what everyone else on the Street is saying. “If you’re out of consensus, it’s uncomfortable,” says Wilson, 58.

But Wilson was also confident in his call. It was derived from proprietary models, conversations with clients and years of experience. Many of the fundamental indicators he was monitoring had already bottomed. In his view, the stock market was poised to climb. Paradoxically, as he points out, his discomfort increased his confidence in his call. Indeed, Wilson feels most assured zigging when the strategist pack zags. “It’s hard to make real money from a call if you’re not out of consensus,” Wilson says.

Wilson was right to stick to his guns. The S&P 500 index climbed 36% from its April low through Oct. 8, the ­strongest six-month run since the 1950s.

A similar out-of-consensus call in 2022 cemented Wilson’s status as a star strategist. He’d correctly prognosticated, even before Russia invaded Ukraine, that the year would see a massive drop in US stocks. The S&P 500 had its worst plunge since the global financial crisis. The majority of his peers at the time had predicted stocks would rise.

Wilson hasn’t always been that prescient. He missed spectacularly in 2023, when he was labeled one of Wall Street’s biggest bears after clinging to predictions of a market crash while peers turned bullish. The S&P 500 jumped 24% that year. His models failed him as he focused more on macro threats to the market—missing the significance of the artificial intelligence trade. “We were wrong,” he says. “Nobody likes to admit that they’re wrong, but we’re all wrong at some points, right?”

Humility doesn’t exactly come naturally to Wilson. Yet over 35 years in the business, he’s developed it. Wilson joined Morgan Stanley in 1989, doing stints in investment banking and sales and trading before becoming chief investment officer at the firm. He was also made chief US equity strategist in 2017. It was an unusual path. On Wall Street, many begin their careers in research and then move on to manage money. For Wilson it was the reverse. He says having been a trader makes him understand the difficulty of his clients’ jobs when he advises them.

Among his peers, Wilson also stands out for his brusque defense of his calls on TV and the radio. He comes across as stern and unsentimental. “Some people probably think—I won’t say this word—that I’m an a-hole, really aggressive and that I want to debate to death,” he says. “In reality, while I’m very competitive, I’m generally a pretty relaxed guy.”

Being right isn’t the point—learning is, he says. Institutional clients “often poke holes in my framework. Sometimes I win those debates, and sometimes I lose them, but most importantly I learn things too—and it goes into my mosaic,” Wilson says. “That’s really what the investment process is about.”