Morgan Stanley's Ted Pick to take helm as CEO from James Gorman

FILE PHOTO: A screen displays the trading information for Morgan Stanley on the floor of the NYSE in New York · Reuters

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By Tatiana Bautzer, Manya Saini and Lananh Nguyen

(Reuters) -Morgan Stanley's Ted Pick won the race to succeed long-time CEO James Gorman and on Wednesday promised to stick to the blue chip Wall Street firm's strategy as it navigates a deal-making slump and uncertain economic outlook.

The investment bank said Gorman, who has held the top job since 2010 and steered the bank in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, will become executive chairman and may stay a full year to help with the transition.

Pick, 54, a three-decade company veteran who heads the institutional securities division, home to the bank's investment banking and trading unit, had been the favorite to win a three-man race against insiders Andy Saperstein and Dan Simkowitz.

"We have two great businesses, the strategy is intact, there is a change in leadership but no change in strategy," Pick said in an interview.

Still, Pick will have to deal with a tumultuous investment banking backdrop which has damaged earnings, an investigation by U.S. regulators into its block trading practices, and managing relationships with the two peers who lost out on the top job.

Meanwhile, the absence of women from the slate of potential candidates underscored Wall Street's diversity gap.

Saperstein, who leads wealth management, will remain co-president and head of wealth, and take on additional responsibilities overseeing investment management. Simkowitz, head of investment management, will become co-president and head of institutional securities.

Pick, who joined Morgan Stanley in 1990 and will take over as CEO on Jan. 1, ran equity capital markets during the financial crisis and was appointed head of sales and trading in 2015.

Prior to his current role, he was the global head of sales and trading and engineered a turnaround of the firm's fixed income division. Gorman said the turnaround was a difficult time in which he saw Pick could make "tough calls" and keep people motivated.

That could stand him in good stead as Wall Street recovers from a dealmaking slump, some analysts said.

"The expectation is that the growth of mergers and acquisitions in the next couple of years will be high and that has been Pick's core competency so we view it as a good move," said Brian Mulberry, client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management, which held Morgan Stanley stock in the past.

Mulberry said Pick also added "stability and experience" that the bank had been "missing as this succession discussion has been going on."