Terms
Issuer:
|
Morgan Stanley Finance LLC
|
Guarantor:
|
Morgan Stanley
|
Underlying Index:
|
S&P 500
®
Index
|
Knock-Out Event:
|
A Knock-Out Event occurs if the Final Average Index Value has decreased, as compared to the Initial Index Value, by
more than
the Knock-Out Buffer Amount (that is, if the Final Average Index Value is less than the Knock-Out Level).
|
Knock-Out Buffer Amount:
|
17.40%
|
Knock-Out Level:
|
, which is 82.60% of the Initial Index Value
|
Payment at Maturity:
|
If a Knock-Out Event HAS NOT occurred
, you will receive
a cash payment at maturity per security equal to:
·
if
the Final Average Index Value is
greater than
the Initial Index Value: $1,000
plus
a return equal to $1,000
times
the greater of (i) the Contingent Minimum Return and (ii) the Underlying Index Return, subject to the Maximum Upside Payment at
Maturity; or
·
if
the Final Average Index Value is
less than or equal to
the Initial Index Value but is
greater than or equal to
the
Knock Out Level: $1,000 + ($1,000 x Absolute Index Return).
For additional clarification, please see “What
is the Return on the Securities at Maturity Assuming a Range of Performance for the Underlying Index?” beginning on page
3.
|
|
If a Knock-Out Event HAS occurred
, you will receive a
cash payment at maturity that will reflect the percentage depreciation in the Final Average Index Value from the Initial Index
Value on a 1-to-1 basis. Under these circumstances, your payment at maturity per $1,000 principal amount security will be calculated
as follows:
$1,000 + ($1,000 x Underlying Index Return).
|
|
Under these circumstances, the Payment at Maturity will be less than the principal amount of $1,000, and will represent a loss of more than 17.40%, and possibly all, of your investment.
|
Contingent Minimum Return:
|
0%
|
Maximum Upside Payment at Maturity:
|
$1,070.00 per security (107% of the principal amount)
|
Index Closing Value:
|
On any day, the index closing value for the Underlying Index
|
Underlying Index Return:
|
Final
Average Index Value – Initial Index Value
Initial Index Value
|
Absolute Index Return:
|
The absolute value of the Underlying Index Return. For example, a –5% Underlying Index Return will result in a +5% Absolute Index Return.
|
Initial Index Value:
|
The Index Closing Value on the Pricing Date
|
Final Average Index Value:
|
The arithmetic average of the Index Closing Values on each of the five Valuation Dates
|
Valuation Dates:
|
June 29, 2020, June 30, 2020, July 1, 2020, July 2, 2020 and July 6, 2020
†
|
Maturity Date:
|
July 9, 2020
†
|
Pricing Date:
|
June 21, 2019
|
Issue Date:
|
June 26, 2019 (3 business days after the Pricing Date)
|
Listing:
|
The securities will not be listed on any securities exchange.
|
Estimated value on the Pricing Date:
|
Approximately $985.20 per security, or within $10.00 of that estimate. See “Additional Terms Specific To The Securities” on page 2.
|
CUSIP / ISIN:
|
61769HHL2 / US61769HHL24
|
†
Subject to postponement
for non-index business days or in the event of a market disruption event and as described under “Description of Notes—Postponement
of Valuation Date(s) or Review Date(s)” in the accompanying product supplement for knock-out notes.
Investing in the securities involves a number of risks. See
“Risk Factors” beginning on page S-20 of the accompanying product supplement and “Selected Risk Considerations”
beginning on page 8 of these preliminary terms.
Morgan Stanley and MSFL have filed a registration statement
(including a prospectus, as supplemented by a product supplement for knock-out notes and an index supplement) with the Securities
and Exchange Commission, or SEC, for the offering to which these preliminary terms relate. Before you invest, you should read the
prospectus in that registration statement, the product supplement for knock-out notes, the index supplement and any other documents
relating to this offering that Morgan Stanley and MSFL have filed with the SEC for more complete information about Morgan Stanley,
MSFL, and this offering. You may get these documents without cost by visiting EDGAR on the SEC website at
.
www.sec.gov.
Alternatively, Morgan Stanley, MSFL, any agent or any dealer participating in this offering will arrange to send you the prospectus,
the product supplement for knock-out notes, the index supplement and these preliminary terms if you so request by calling toll-free
1-800-584-6837.
You may revoke your offer to purchase the securities at any
time prior to the time at which we accept such offer on the date the securities are priced. We reserve the right to change the
terms of, or reject any offer to purchase the securities prior to their issuance. In the event of any changes to the terms of the
securities, we will notify you and you will be asked to accept such changes in connection with your purchase. You may also choose
to reject such changes in which case we may reject your offer to purchase.
Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state
securities commission has approved or disapproved of the securities or passed upon the accuracy or the adequacy of these preliminary
terms or the accompanying product supplement for knock-out notes, index supplement and prospectus. Any representation to the contrary
is a criminal offense.
|
Price to Public
(1)
|
Fees and Commissions
(1)(2)
|
Proceeds to Us
(3)
|
Per security
|
$1,000
|
$10.00
|
$990.00
|
Total
|
$
|
$
|
$
|
|
(1)
|
J.P. Morgan Securities LLC and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
will act as placement agents for the securities. The placement agents will forgo fees for sales to certain fiduciary accounts.
The total fees represent the amount that the placement agents receive from sales to accounts other than such fiduciary accounts.
The placement agents will receive a fee from the Issuer or one of its affiliates that will not exceed $10.00 per $1,000 principal
amount of securities.
|
|
(2)
|
Please see “Supplemental Plan of Distribution;
Conflicts of Interest” in these preliminary terms for information about fees and commissions.
|
|
(3)
|
See “Use of Proceeds and Hedging” on page
11.
|
The agent for this offering, Morgan
Stanley & Co. LLC (“MS & Co.”), is an affiliate of MSFL and a wholly owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley. See
“Supplemental Plan of Distribution; Conflicts of Interest” below.
The
securities are not deposits OR SAVINGS ACCOUNTS and are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other governmental
agency OR INSTRUMENTALITY, nor are they obligations of, or guaranteed by, a bank.
References
to “we,” “us” and “our” refer to Morgan Stanley or MSFL, or Morgan Stanley and MSFL collectively,
as the context requires.
Morgan Stanley
|
|
June 18, 2019
Additional
Terms Specific to the Securities
You
should read these preliminary terms together with the prospectus dated November 16, 2017, as supplemented by the product supplement
for knock-out notes dated November 16, 2017 and the index supplement dated November 16, 2017.
These preliminary terms, together
with the documents listed below, contain the terms of the securities and supersede all other prior or contemporaneous oral statements
as well as any other written materials including preliminary or indicative pricing terms, correspondence, trade ideas, structures
for implementation, sample structures, fact sheets, brochures or other educational materials of ours.
You should carefully
consider, among other things, the matters set forth in “Risk Factors” in the accompanying product supplement for knock-out
notes, as the securities involve risks not associated with conventional debt securities. We urge you to consult your investment,
legal, tax, accounting and other advisers before you invest in the securities.
You
may access these documents on the SEC website at
.
ww
.
w.sec.gov
as follows (or if such address has changed, by reviewing our filings for the relevant date on the SEC website):
|
·
|
Index supplement dated November 16, 2017:
|
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/895421/000095010317011283/dp82797_424b2-indexsupp.htm
|
·
|
Prospectus dated November 16, 2017:
|
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/895421/000095010317011237/dp82798_424b2-base.htm
The
original issue price of each security is $1,000. This price includes costs associated with issuing, selling, structuring and hedging
the securities, which are borne by you, and, consequently, the estimated value of the securities on the Pricing Date will be less
than $1,000. We estimate that the value of each security on the Pricing Date will be approximately $985.20, or within $10.00 of
that estimate. Our estimate of the value of the securities as determined on the Pricing Date will be set forth in the final pricing
supplement.
What
goes into the estimated value on the Pricing Date?
In
valuing the securities on the Pricing Date, we take into account that the securities comprise both a debt component and a performance-based
component linked to the Underlying Index. The estimated value of the securities is determined using our own pricing and valuation
models, market inputs and assumptions relating to the Underlying Index, instruments based on the Underlying Index, volatility
and other factors including current and expected interest rates, as well as an interest rate related to our secondary market credit
spread, which is the implied interest rate at which our conventional fixed rate debt trades in the secondary market.
What
determines the economic terms of the securities?
In
determining the economic terms of the securities, including the Contingent Minimum Return, the Knock-Out Level and the Maximum
Upside Payment at Maturity, we use an internal funding rate, which is likely to be lower than our secondary market credit spreads
and therefore advantageous to us. If the issuing, selling, structuring and hedging costs borne by you were lower or if the internal
funding rate were higher, one or more of the economic terms of the securities would be more favorable to you.
What
is the relationship between the estimated value on the Pricing Date and the secondary market price of the securities?
The
price at which MS & Co. purchases the securities in the secondary market, absent changes in market conditions, including those
related to the Underlying Index, may vary from, and be lower than, the estimated value on the Pricing Date, because the secondary
market price takes into account our secondary market credit spread as well as the bid-offer spread that MS & Co. would charge
in a secondary market transaction of this type and other factors. However, because the costs associated with issuing, selling,
structuring and hedging the securities are not fully deducted upon issuance, for a period of up to 6 months following the issue
date, to the extent that MS & Co. may buy or sell the securities in the secondary market, absent changes in market conditions,
including those related to the Underlying Index, and to our secondary market credit spreads, it would do so based on values higher
than the estimated value. We expect that those higher values will also be reflected in your brokerage account statements.
MS
& Co. may, but is not obligated to, make a market in the securities, and, if it once chooses to make a market, may cease doing
so at any time.
What
is the Return on the Securities at Maturity Assuming a Range of Performance for the Underlying Index?
The
following table and graph illustrate the hypothetical return at maturity on the securities. The “Return on Securities”
as used in these preliminary terms is the number, expressed as a percentage, that results from comparing the payment at maturity
per $1,000 principal amount security to $1,000. The hypothetical returns set forth below reflect the Maximum Upside Payment at
Maturity of $1,070.00 per security and assume an Initial Index Value of 2,500, a Knock-Out Level of 2,065.00 (which is 82.60%
of the hypothetical Initial Index Value) and a Contingent Minimum Return of 0%. The hypothetical returns set forth below are for
illustrative purposes only and may not reflect the actual returns applicable to a purchaser of the securities.
Final Average Index Value
|
Underlying Index Return
|
Return on Securities
|
4,000.00
|
60.00%
|
7.00%
|
3,750.00
|
50.00%
|
7.00%
|
3,500.00
|
40.00%
|
7.00%
|
3,250.00
|
30.00%
|
7.00%
|
3,000.00
|
20.00%
|
7.00%
|
2,875.00
|
15.00%
|
7.00%
|
2,750.00
|
10.00%
|
7.00%
|
2,675.00
|
7.00%
|
7.00%
|
2,625.00
|
5.00%
|
5.00%
|
2,562.50
|
2.50%
|
2.50%
|
2,500.00
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
2,375.00
|
-5.00%
|
5.00%
|
2,250.00
|
-10.00%
|
10.00%
|
2,125.00
|
-15.00%
|
15.00%
|
2,065.00
|
-17.40%
|
17.40%
|
2,000.00
|
-20.00%
|
-20.00%
|
1,875.00
|
-25.00%
|
-25.00%
|
1,750.00
|
-30.00%
|
-30.00%
|
1,500.00
|
-40.00%
|
-40.00%
|
1,000.00
|
-60.00%
|
-60.00%
|
500.00
|
-80.00%
|
-80.00%
|
0
|
-100.00%
|
-100.00%
|
Securities Payoff Diagram
|
|
How it works
|
§
|
Upside Scenario if the Underlying Index Appreciates
.
If the Final Average Index Value is greater than the Initial Index Value, the investor would receive the $1,000 principal
amount
plus
100% of the appreciation of the Underlying Index over the term of the securities, subject to the Maximum Upside
Payment at Maturity.
|
|
§
|
Absolute Return Scenario.
If the Final Average Index
Value is
less than or equal to
the Initial Index Value and is
greater than or equal to
the Knock-Out Level, the investor
would receive a 1% positive return on the securities for each 1% negative return on the Underlying Index.
|
|
§
|
If the Underlying Index depreciates 10%, the investor would receive a 10% return, or $1,100 per security.
|
|
§
|
The maximum return you may receive in this scenario is a positive 17.40% return at maturity.
|
|
§
|
Downside Scenario.
If the Final Average Index Value is
less than
the Knock-Out Level, the investor would receive an amount less than the $1,000 principal amount, based on a 1%
loss of principal for each 1% decline in the Underlying Index. Under these circumstances, the Payment at Maturity will be less
than 82.60% of the principal amount per security. There is no minimum payment at maturity on the securities.
|
|
§
|
If the Underlying Index depreciates 70%, the investor would lose 70% of the investor’s principal and receive only $300
per security at maturity, or 30% of the principal amount.
|
Hypothetical
Examples of Amounts Payable at Maturity
The
following examples illustrate how the return on the securities set forth in the table on the previous page is calculated.
Example
1: A Knock-Out Event HAS NOT occurred, and the Index Closing Value increases from the Initial Index Value of 2,500 to a Final
Average Index Value of 3,250.
Because the Underlying Index Return of 30% would result in a payment at maturity that is greater
than the Maximum Upside Payment at Maturity, the investor receives only the Maximum Upside Payment at Maturity of $1,070.00 per
security.
Example
2: A Knock-Out Event HAS NOT occurred, and the Index Closing Value increases from the Initial Index Value of 2,500 to a Final
Average Index Value of 2,562.50.
Because the Underlying Index Return of 2.50% is greater than the Contingent Minimum Return
of 0%, the investor receives a payment at maturity per $1,000 principal amount security, calculated as follows:
$1,000 + ($1,000 x 2.50%) = $1,025.00
Example
3: A Knock-Out Event HAS NOT occurred, and the Index Closing Value decreases from the Initial Index Value of 2,500 to a Final
Average Index Value of 2,250
. Because a Knock-Out Event has not occurred and the Final Average Index Value is less than the
Initial Index Value by 10%, the investor receives the benefit of the absolute return feature and therefore receives a payment
at maturity per $1,000 principal amount security, calculated as follows:
$1,000 + ($1,000 x 10%) = $1,100.00
Example
4: A Knock-Out Event HAS occurred, and the Index Closing Value decreases from the Initial Index Value of 2,500 to a Final Average
Index Value of 1,000
. Because a Knock-Out Event has occurred, the investor loses the benefit of the absolute return feature,
and receives an amount that is significantly less than the $1,000 principal amount, based on a 1% loss of principal for each 1%
decline in the Underlying Index, calculated as follows:
$1,000 + ($1,000 x -60%) = $400.00
Selected
Purchase Considerations
|
·
|
CAPPED APPRECIATION POTENTIAL; NO GUARANTEED RETURN OF ANY PRINCIPAL
— The securities provide the opportunity to participate in the appreciation of the Underlying Index at maturity, subject
to the Maximum Upside Payment at Maturity.
If a Knock-Out Event HAS NOT occurred
and the Final Average Index Value
is
greater than
the Initial Index Value, you will receive at maturity $1,000
plus
a return equal to $1,000 times
the greater of (i) the Contingent Minimum Return (which is 0%) and (ii) the Underlying Index Return, subject to the Maximum Upside
Payment at Maturity.
If a Knock-Out Event HAS NOT occurred
and the Final Average Index Value is
less than or equal
to
the Initial Index Value but is
greater than or equal to
the Knock Out Level, you will receive at maturity $1,000
plus
$1,000
times
the Absolute Index Return.
However, if a Knock-Out Event HAS occurred
, you will lose
a significant portion or all of your investment, based on a 1% loss for every 1% decline in the Final Average Index Value, as compared
to the Initial Index Value. Because the securities are our unsecured obligations, payment of any amount at maturity is subject
to our ability to pay our obligations as they become due.
|
|
·
|
SECURITIES LINKED TO THE S&P 500
®
INDEX
—
The S&P 500
®
Index, which is calculated, maintained and published by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“S&P”),
consists of stocks of 500 component companies selected to provide a performance benchmark for the U.S. equity markets. The calculation
of the S&P 500
®
Index is based on the relative value of the float adjusted aggregate market capitalization of
the 500 component companies as of a particular time as compared to the aggregate average market capitalization of 500 similar companies
during the base period of the years 1941 through 1943. For additional information about the S&P 500
®
Index,
see the information set forth under “S&P 500
®
Index” in the accompanying index supplement.
|
|
·
|
TAX TREATMENT
— You should review carefully the section
entitled “United States Federal Taxation” in the accompanying product supplement for knock-out notes. Although there
is uncertainty regarding the U.S. federal income tax consequences of an investment in the securities due to the lack of governing
authority, in the opinion of our counsel, Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, under current law, and based on current market conditions,
a security should be treated as a single financial contract that is an “open transaction” for U.S. federal income tax
purposes. However, because our counsel’s opinion is based in part on market conditions as of the date of this document, it
is subject to confirmation on the pricing date. Assuming this treatment of the securities is respected, your gain or loss on the
securities should be treated as long-term capital gain or loss if you have held the securities for more than one year, and short-term
capital gain or loss otherwise, even if you are an initial purchaser of securities at a price that is below the principal amount
of the securities.
|
The
Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) or a court, however, may not respect this characterization or treatment of the
securities, in which case the timing and character of any income or loss on the securities could be significantly and adversely
affected. For example, under one possible treatment, the IRS could seek to recharacterize the securities as debt instruments.
In that event, you would be required to accrue into income original issue discount on the securities every year at a “comparable
yield” determined at the time of issuance and recognize all income and gain in respect of the securities as ordinary income.
Additionally, as discussed under “United States Federal Taxation—FATCA” in the accompanying product supplement
for knock-out notes, the withholding rules commonly referred to as “FATCA” would apply to the securities if they were
recharacterized as debt instruments. However, recently proposed regulations (the preamble to which specifies that taxpayers are
permitted to rely on them pending finalization) eliminate the withholding requirement on payments of gross proceeds of a taxable
disposition. The risk that financial instruments providing for buffers, triggers or similar downside protection features, such
as the securities, would be recharacterized as debt is greater than the risk of recharacterization for comparable financial instruments
that do not have such features. We do not plan to request a ruling from the IRS regarding the tax treatment of the securities,
and the IRS or a court may not agree with the tax treatment described above.
In
2007, the U.S. Treasury Department and the IRS released a notice requesting comments on the U.S. federal income tax treatment
of “prepaid forward contracts” and similar instruments. The notice focuses on whether to require holders of these
instruments to accrue income over the term of their investment. It also asks for comments on a number of related topics, including
the character of income or loss with respect to these instruments; whether short-term instruments should be subject to any such
accrual regime; the relevance of factors such as exchange-traded status of the instruments and the nature of the underlying property
to which the instruments are linked; the degree, if any, to which any income (including any mandated accruals) realized by non-U.S.
holders should be subject to withholding tax; and whether these investments are or should be subject to the “constructive
ownership” rule, which very generally can operate to recharacterize certain long-term capital gain as ordinary income and
impose an interest charge. While the notice requests comments on appropriate transition rules and effective dates, any Treasury
regulations or other guidance promulgated after consideration of these issues could materially and adversely affect the tax consequences
of an investment in the securities, possibly with retroactive effect.
As
discussed in the accompanying product supplement for knock-out notes, Section 871(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, and Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder (“Section 871(m)”) generally impose a 30% (or a lower applicable
treaty rate) withholding tax on dividend equivalents paid or deemed paid to Non-U.S. Holders with respect to certain financial
instruments linked to U.S. equities or indices that include U.S. equities (each, an “Underlying Security”). Subject
to certain exceptions, Section 871(m) generally applies to securities that substantially replicate the economic performance of
one or more Underlying Securities, as determined based on tests set forth in the applicable Treasury regulations (a “Specified
Security”). However, pursuant to an IRS notice, Section 871(m) will not apply to securities issued before January 1, 2021
that do not have a delta of one with respect to any Underlying Security. Based on the terms of the securities and current market
conditions, we expect that the securities will not have a delta of one with respect to any Underlying Security on the pricing
date. However, we will provide an updated determination in the pricing supplement. Assuming that the securities do not have a
delta of
one
with respect to any Underlying Security, our counsel is of the opinion that the securities should not be Specified Securities
and, therefore, should not be subject to Section 871(m).
Our
determination is not binding on the IRS, and the IRS may disagree with this determination. Section 871(m) is complex and its application
may depend on your particular circumstances, including whether you enter into other transactions with respect to an Underlying
Security. If withholding is required, we will not be required to pay any additional amounts with respect to the amounts so withheld.
You
should consult your tax adviser regarding the treatment of the securities, including possible alternative characterizations, the
issues presented by the 2007 notice, the potential application of Section 871(m) and any tax consequences arising under the laws
of any state, local or non-U.S. taxing jurisdiction.
The
discussion in the preceding paragraphs under “Tax Treatment” and the section entitled “United States Federal
Taxation” in the accompanying product supplement for knock-out notes, insofar as they purport to describe provisions of
U.S. federal income tax laws or legal conclusions with respect thereto, constitute the full opinion of Davis Polk & Wardwell
LLP regarding the material U.S. federal tax consequences of an investment in the securities.
Selected
Risk Considerations
An
investment in the securities involves significant risks. Investing in the securities is not equivalent to investing directly in
the Underlying Index or any of the component stocks of the Underlying Index. These risks are explained in more detail in the “Risk
Factors” section of the accompanying product supplement for knock-out notes dated November 16, 2017.
|
·
|
YOUR
INVESTMENT IN THE SECURITIES MAY RESULT IN A LOSS —
The terms of the securities differ from those of ordinary debt securities
in that we do not guarantee to pay you any of the principal amount of the securities at maturity and do not pay you interest on
the securities. If a Knock-Out Event has occurred, you will be fully exposed to the depreciation in the Final Average Index Value
as compared to the Initial Index Value on a 1-to-1 basis.
If a Knock-Out Event has occurred, the Payment at Maturity on each
security will be significantly less than the principal amount of the securities, and, consequently, the entire principal amount
of your investment is at risk.
|
|
·
|
THE SECURITIES DO NOT PAY INTEREST
–
Unlike ordinary debt securities, the securities do not pay interest and do not guarantee any return of principal at
maturity.
|
|
·
|
YOUR APPRECIATION POTENTIAL IS LIMITED
– The appreciation potential of the securities will be limited by the Maximum Upside Payment at Maturity. If the Final Average
Index Value is greater than the Initial Index Value, the Payment at Maturity will never exceed the Maximum Upside Payment at Maturity,
even if the Final Average Index Value is substantially greater than the Initial Index Value. The maximum positive return you can
receive if the Underlying Index depreciates is also limited by the Knock-Out Level.
|
|
·
|
NO DIVIDEND PAYMENTS OR VOTING RIGHTS
– As a holder of the securities, you will not have voting rights or rights to receive cash dividends or other distributions
or other rights that holders of securities composing the Underlying Index would have.
|
|
·
|
THE SECURITIES ARE SUBJECT TO OUR CREDIT RISK, AND ANY ACTUAL OR
ANTICIPATED CHANGES TO OUR CREDIT RATINGS OR CREDIT SPREADS MAY ADVERSELY AFFECT THE MARKET VALUE OF THE SECURITIES
–
You are dependent on our ability to pay all amounts due on the securities at maturity, and therefore you are subject to our credit
risk. If we default on our obligations under the securities, your investment would be at risk and you could lose some or all of
your investment. As a result, the market value of the securities prior to maturity will be affected by changes in the market’s
view of our creditworthiness. Any actual or anticipated decline in our credit ratings or increase in the credit spreads charged
by the market for taking our credit risk is likely to adversely affect the market value of the securities.
|
|
·
|
AS A FINANCE SUBSIDIARY, MSFL HAS NO INDEPENDENT OPERATIONS AND
WILL HAVE NO INDEPENDENT ASSETS
– As a finance subsidiary, MSFL has no independent operations beyond the issuance and
administration of its securities and will have no independent assets available for distributions to holders of MSFL securities
if they make claims in respect of such securities in a bankruptcy, resolution or similar proceeding. Accordingly, any recoveries
by such holders will be limited to those available under the related guarantee by Morgan Stanley and that guarantee will rank
pari
passu
with all other unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Morgan Stanley. Holders will have recourse only to a single claim
against Morgan Stanley and its assets under the guarantee. Holders of securities issued by MSFL should accordingly assume that
in any such proceedings they would not have any priority over and should be treated
pari passu
with the claims of other
unsecured, unsubordinated creditors of Morgan Stanley, including holders of Morgan Stanley-issued securities.
|
|
·
|
THE RATE WE ARE WILLING TO PAY FOR SECURITIES OF THIS TYPE, MATURITY
AND ISSUANCE SIZE IS LIKELY TO BE LOWER THAN THE RATE IMPLIED BY OUR SECONDARY MARKET CREDIT SPREADS AND ADVANTAGEOUS TO US. BOTH
THE LOWER RATE AND THE INCLUSION OF COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH ISSUING, SELLING, STRUCTURING AND HEDGING THE SECURITIES IN THE ORIGINAL
ISSUE PRICE REDUCE THE ECONOMIC TERMS OF THE SECURITIES, CAUSE THE ESTIMATED VALUE OF THE SECURITIES TO BE LESS THAN THE ORIGINAL
ISSUE PRICE AND WILL ADVERSELY AFFECT SECONDARY MARKET PRICES
– Assuming no change in market conditions or any other relevant
factors, the prices, if any, at which dealers, including MS & Co., may be willing to purchase the securities in secondary market
transactions will likely be significantly lower than the original issue price, because secondary market prices will exclude the
issuing, selling, structuring and hedging-related costs that are included in the original issue price and borne by you and because
the secondary market prices will reflect our secondary market credit spreads and the bid-offer spread that any dealer would charge
in a secondary market transaction of this type as well as other factors.
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The
inclusion of the costs of issuing, selling, structuring and hedging the securities in the original issue price and the lower rate
we are willing to pay as issuer make the economic terms of the securities less favorable to you than they otherwise would be.
However,
because the costs associated with issuing, selling, structuring and hedging the securities are not fully deducted upon issuance,
for a period of up to 6 months following the issue date, to the extent that MS & Co. may buy or sell the securities in the
secondary market, absent changes in market conditions, including those related to the Underlying Index, and to our secondary market
credit spreads, it would do so based on values higher than the estimated value, and we expect that those higher values will also
be reflected in your brokerage account statements.
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THE
ESTIMATED VALUE OF THE SECURITIES IS DETERMINED BY REFERENCE TO OUR PRICING AND VALUATION MODELS, WHICH MAY DIFFER FROM THOSE
OF OTHER DEALERS AND IS NOT A MAXIMUM OR MINIMUM SECONDARY MARKET PRICE
– These pricing and valuation models are proprietary
and rely in part on subjective views of certain market inputs and certain assumptions about future events, which may prove to
be incorrect. As a result, because there is no market-standard way to value these types of securities, our models may yield a
higher estimated value of the securities than those generated by others, including other dealers in the market, if they attempted
to value the securities. In addition, the estimated value on the Pricing Date does not represent a minimum or maximum price at
which dealers, including MS & Co., would be willing to purchase your securities in the secondary market (if any exists) at
any time. The value of your securities at any time after the date of this pricing supplement will vary based on many factors that
cannot be predicted with accuracy, including our creditworthiness and changes in market conditions. See also “Many economic
and market factors will impact the value of the securities” above.
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LACK OF LIQUIDITY
— The
securities will not be listed on any securities exchange. Therefore, there may be little or no secondary market for the securities.
Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC (“MS & Co.”) may, but is not obligated to, make a market in the securities and, if
it once chooses to make a market, may cease doing so at any time. When it does make a market, it will generally do so for transactions
of routine secondary market size at prices based on its estimate of the current value of the securities, taking into account its
bid/offer spread, our credit spreads, market volatility, the notional size of the proposed sale, the cost of unwinding any related
hedging positions, the time remaining to maturity and the likelihood that it will be able to resell the securities. Even if there
is a secondary market, it may not provide enough liquidity to allow you to trade or sell the securities easily. Since other broker-dealers
may not participate significantly in the secondary market for the securities, the price at which you may be able to trade your
securities is likely to depend on the price, if any, at which MS & Co. is willing to transact. If, at any time, MS & Co.
were not to make a market in the securities, it is likely that there would be no secondary market for the securities. Accordingly,
you should be willing to hold your securities to maturity.
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POTENTIAL CONFLICTS —
We
and our affiliates play a variety of roles in connection with the issuance of the securities, including acting as calculation agent
and hedging our obligations under the securities. In performing these duties, the economic interests of the calculation agent and
other affiliates of ours are potentially adverse to your interests as an investor in the securities. We will not have any obligation
to consider your interests as a holder of the securities in taking any corporate action that might affect the value of the Underlying
Index and the securities. In addition, MS & Co. has determined the estimated value of the securities on the Pricing Date.
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HEDGING AND TRADING ACTIVITY BY OUR
AFFILIATES COULD POTENTIALLY ADVERSELY AFFECT THE VALUE OF THE SECURITIES
– One or more of our affiliates and/or third-party
dealers expect to carry out hedging activities related to the securities (and to other instruments linked to the Underlying Index
or its component stocks), including trading in the stocks that constitute the Underlying Index as well as in other instruments
related to the Underlying Index. As a result, these entities may be unwinding or adjusting hedge positions during the term of the
securities, and the hedging strategy may involve greater and more frequent dynamic adjustments to the hedge as the Valuation Dates
approach. Some of our affiliates also trade the stocks that constitute the Underlying Index and other financial instruments related
to the Underlying Index on a regular basis as part of their general broker-dealer and other businesses. Any of these hedging or
trading activities on or prior to the Pricing Date could potentially increase the Initial Index Value, and, therefore, could increase
the value at or above which the Underlying Index must close on the Valuation Dates so that investors do not suffer a significant
loss on their initial investment in the securities.
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THE OFFERING OF THE SECURITIES MAY
BE TERMINATED BEFORE THE PRICING DATE —
If we determine prior to pricing that it is not reasonable to treat your purchase
and ownership of the securities as an “open transaction” for U.S. federal income tax purposes, the offering of the
securities will be terminated.
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MANY ECONOMIC AND MARKET FACTORS
WILL IMPACT THE VALUE OF THE SECURITIES
— The value of the securities will be affected by a number of economic and market
factors that may either offset or magnify each other, including:
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the value, especially in relation to the Knock-Out Level, and the actual
or expected volatility, of the Underlying Index;
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the
time to maturity of the securities;
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the
dividend rates on the common stocks underlying the Underlying Index;
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interest
and yield rates in the market generally;
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geopolitical
conditions and economic, financial, political, regulatory or judicial events that affect the stocks constituting the Underlying
Index or stock markets generally and which may affect the Index Closing Value of the Underlying Index on the Valuation Dates;
and
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any
actual or anticipated changes in our credit ratings or credit spreads.
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Some
or all of these factors will influence the price that you will receive if you sell your securities prior to maturity. For example,
you may have to sell your securities at a substantial discount from the principal amount if a Knock-Out Event is likely to occur
in light of the then-current level of the Underlying Index.
You
cannot predict the future performance of the Underlying Index based on its historical performance. We cannot guarantee that a
Knock-Out Event will not occur. You can review the historical values of the Underlying Index in “Historical Information”
below.
Additional
Terms of the Securities
Terms
used but not defined in this pricing supplement are defined in the product supplement for knock-out notes, the index supplement
or in the prospectus.
Underlying
Index Publisher
S&P
Dow Jones Indices LLC or any successor thereof
Issuer
Notice to Registered Security Holders, the Trustee and the Depositary:
In
the event that the Maturity Date is postponed due to postponement of the final Valuation Date, the issuer shall give notice of
such postponement and, once it has been determined, of the date to which the Maturity Date has been rescheduled (i) to each registered
holder of the securities by mailing notice of such postponement by first class mail, postage prepaid, to such registered holder’s
last address as it shall appear upon the registry books, (ii) to the trustee by facsimile confirmed by mailing such notice to
the trustee by first class mail, postage prepaid, at its New York office and (iii) to The Depository Trust Company (the “depositary”)
by telephone or facsimile confirmed by mailing such notice to the depositary by first class mail, postage prepaid. Any notice
that is mailed to a registered holder of the securities in the manner herein provided shall be conclusively presumed to have been
duly given to such registered holder, whether or not such registered holder receives the notice. The issuer shall give such notice
as promptly as possible, and in no case later than (i) with respect to notice of postponement of the Maturity Date, the business
day immediately preceding the scheduled Maturity Date and (ii) with respect to notice of the date to which the Maturity Date has
been rescheduled, the business day immediately following the actual final Valuation Date.
The
issuer shall, or shall cause the calculation agent to, (i) provide written notice to the trustee and to the depositary of the
amount of cash, if any, to be delivered with respect to each stated principal amount of the securities, on or prior to 10:30 a.m.
(New York City time) on the business day preceding the Maturity Date, and (ii) deliver the aggregate cash amount due with respect
to the securities, if any, to the trustee for delivery to the depositary, as holder of the securities, on the Maturity Date.
Additional
Information About the Securities
Use
of Proceeds and Hedging
The
proceeds from the sale of the securities will be used by us for general corporate purposes. We will receive, in aggregate, $1,000
per security issued, because, when we enter into hedging transactions in order to meet our obligations under the securities, our
hedging counterparty will reimburse the cost of the Agent’s commissions. The costs of the securities borne by you and described
on page 2 above comprise the Agent’s commissions and the cost of issuing, structuring and hedging the securities.
On
or prior to the Pricing Date, we will hedge our anticipated exposure in connection with the securities by entering into hedging
transactions with our affiliates and/or third party dealers. We expect our hedging counterparties to take positions in stocks
of the Underlying Index, in futures and/or options contracts on the Underlying Index or any component stocks of the Underlying
Index listed on major securities markets, or in any other securities or instruments that they may wish to use in connection with
such hedging. Such purchase activity could potentially increase the value of the Underlying Index on the Pricing Date, and therefore
could increase the value at or above which the Underlying Index must close on the Valuation Dates so that investors do not suffer
a significant loss on their initial investment in the securities. In addition, through our affiliates, we are likely to modify
our hedge position throughout the term of the securities, including on the Valuation Dates, by purchasing and selling the stocks
constituting the Underlying Index, futures or options contracts on the Underlying Index or its component stocks listed on major
securities markets or positions in any other available securities or instruments that we may wish to use in connection with such
hedging activities. As a result, these entities may be unwinding or adjusting hedge positions during the term of the securities,
and the hedging strategy may involve greater and more frequent dynamic adjustments to the hedge as the Valuation Dates approach.
We cannot give any assurance that our hedging activities will not affect the value of the Underlying Index, and, therefore, adversely
affect the value of the securities or the payment you will receive at maturity, if any.
Historical
Information
The
following graph sets forth the historical performance of the S&P 500
®
Index based on the daily historical closing
values of the Underlying Index from January 1, 2014 through June 14, 2019. The closing value of the Underlying Index on June 14,
2019 was 2,886.98. We obtained the closing values of the Underlying Index below from Bloomberg Financial Markets. We make no representation
or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of the information obtained from Bloomberg Financial Markets.
The
historical values of the Underlying Index should not be taken as an indication of future performance, and no assurance can be
given as to the Index Closing Value on the Valuation Dates. We cannot give you any assurance that a Knock-Out Event will not occur.
Historical Performance of the
S&P 500
®
Index
“Standard
& Poor’s
®
,” “S&P
®
,” “S&P 500
®
,” “Standard
& Poor’s 500” and “500” are trademarks of Standard and Poor’s Financial Services LLC. See “S&P
500
®
Index” in the accompanying index supplement.
Benefit
Plan Investor Considerations
Each
fiduciary of a pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit plan subject to Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”) (a “Plan”), should consider the fiduciary standards of ERISA in the
context of the Plan’s particular circumstances before authorizing an investment in the securities. Accordingly, among other
factors, the fiduciary should consider whether the investment would satisfy the prudence and diversification requirements of ERISA
and would be consistent with the documents and instruments governing the Plan.
In
addition, we and certain of our affiliates, including MS & Co., may each be considered a “party in interest” within
the meaning of ERISA, or a “disqualified person” within the meaning of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
(the “Code”), with respect to many Plans, as well as many individual retirement accounts and Keogh plans (such accounts
and plans, together with other plans, accounts and arrangements subject to Section 4975 of the Code, also “Plans”).
ERISA Section 406 and Code Section 4975 generally prohibit transactions between Plans and parties in interest or disqualified
persons. Prohibited transactions within the meaning of ERISA or the Code would likely arise, for example, if the securities are
acquired by or with the assets of a Plan with respect to which MS & Co. or any of its affiliates is a service provider or
other party in interest, unless the securities are acquired pursuant to an exemption from the “prohibited transaction”
rules. A violation of these “prohibited transaction” rules could result in an excise tax or other liabilities under
ERISA and/or Section 4975 of the Code for those persons, unless exemptive relief is available under an applicable statutory or
administrative exemption.
The
U.S. Department of Labor has issued five prohibited transaction class exemptions (“PTCEs”) that may provide exemptive
relief for direct or indirect prohibited transactions resulting from the purchase or holding of the securities. Those class exemptions
are PTCE 96-23 (for certain transactions determined by in-house asset managers), PTCE 95-60 (for certain transactions involving
insurance company general accounts), PTCE 91-38 (for certain transactions involving bank collective investment funds), PTCE 90-1
(for certain transactions involving insurance company separate accounts) and PTCE 84-14 (for certain transactions determined by
independent qualified professional asset managers). In addition, ERISA Section 408(b)(17) and Section 4975(d)(20) of the Code
provide an exemption for the purchase and sale of securities and the related lending transactions, provided that neither the issuer
of the securities nor any of its affiliates has or exercises any discretionary authority or control or renders any investment
advice with respect to the assets of the Plan involved in the transaction and provided further that the Plan pays no more, and
receives no less, than “adequate consideration” in connection with the transaction (the so-called “service provider”
exemption). There can be no assurance that any of these class or statutory exemptions will be available with respect to transactions
involving the securities.
Because
we may be considered a party in interest with respect to many Plans, the securities may not be purchased, held or disposed of
by any Plan, any entity whose underlying assets include “plan assets” by reason of any Plan’s investment in
the entity (a “Plan Asset Entity”) or any person investing “plan assets” of any Plan, unless such purchase,
holding or disposition is eligible for exemptive relief, including relief available under PTCEs 96-23, 95-60, 91-38, 90-1, 84-14
or the service provider exemption or such purchase, holding or disposition is otherwise not prohibited. Any purchaser, including
any fiduciary purchasing on behalf of a Plan, transferee or holder of the securities will be deemed to have represented, in its
corporate and its fiduciary capacity, by its purchase and holding of the securities that either (a) it is not a Plan or a Plan
Asset Entity and is not purchasing such securities on behalf of or with “plan assets” of any Plan or with any assets
of a governmental, non-U.S. or church plan that is subject to any federal, state, local or non-U.S. law that is substantially
similar to the provisions of Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code (“Similar Law”) or (b) its purchase,
holding and disposition of these securities will not constitute or result in a non-exempt prohibited transaction under Section
406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code or violate any Similar Law.
Due
to the complexity of these rules and the penalties that may be imposed upon persons involved in non-exempt prohibited transactions,
it is particularly important that fiduciaries or other persons considering purchasing the securities on behalf of or with “plan
assets” of any Plan consult with their counsel regarding the availability of exemptive relief.
The
securities are contractual financial instruments. The financial exposure provided by the securities is not a substitute or proxy
for, and is not intended as a substitute or proxy for, individualized investment management or advice for the benefit of any purchaser
or holder of the securities. The securities have not been designed and will not be administered in a manner intended to reflect
the individualized needs and objectives of any purchaser or holder of the securities.
Each
purchaser or holder of any securities acknowledges and agrees that:
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(i)
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the purchaser or holder or its fiduciary has made and shall make all investment decisions for the purchaser or holder and the
purchaser or holder has not relied and shall not rely in any way upon us or our affiliates to act as a fiduciary or adviser of
the purchaser or holder with respect to (A) the design and terms of the securities, (B) the purchaser or holder’s investment
in the securities, or (C) the exercise of or failure to exercise any rights we have under or with respect to the securities;
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(ii)
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we and our affiliates have acted and will act solely for our own account in connection with (A) all transactions relating to
the securities and (B) all hedging transactions in connection with our obligations under the securities;
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(iii)
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any and all assets and positions relating to hedging transactions by us or our affiliates are assets and positions of those
entities and are not assets and positions held for the benefit of the purchaser or holder;
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(iv)
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our interests are adverse to the interests of the purchaser or holder; and
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(v)
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neither we nor any of our affiliates is a fiduciary or adviser of the purchaser or holder in connection with any such assets,
positions or transactions, and any information that we or any of our affiliates may provide is not intended to be impartial investment
advice.
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Each
purchaser and holder of the securities has exclusive responsibility for ensuring that its purchase, holding and disposition of
the securities do not violate the prohibited transaction rules of ERISA or the Code or any Similar Law. The sale of any securities
to any Plan or plan subject to Similar Law is in no respect a representation by us or any of our affiliates or representatives
that such an investment meets all relevant legal requirements with respect to investments by plans generally or any particular
plan, or that such an investment is appropriate for plans generally or any particular plan. In this regard, neither this discussion
nor anything provided in this document is or is intended to be investment advice directed at any potential Plan purchaser or at
Plan purchasers generally and such purchasers of these securities should consult and rely on their own counsel and advisers as
to whether an investment in these securities is suitable.
However,
individual retirement accounts, individual retirement annuities and Keogh plans, as well as employee benefit plans that permit
participants to direct the investment of their accounts, will not be permitted to purchase or hold the securities if the account,
plan or annuity is for the benefit of an employee of Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Morgan Stanley or Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
LLC (“MSSB”) or a family member and the employee receives any compensation (such as, for example, an addition to bonus)
based on the purchase of the securities by the account, plan or annuity.
Supplemental
Plan of Distribution; Conflicts of Interest
JPMorgan
Chase Bank, N.A., J.P. Morgan Securities LLC and its affiliates will act as placement agents for the securities and will receive
a fee from the Issuer or one of its affiliates that will not exceed $10.00 per $1,000 principal amount of securities, but will
forgo any fees for sales to certain fiduciary accounts.
MS
& Co. is an affiliate of MSFL and a wholly owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley, and it and other affiliates of ours expect
to make a profit by selling, structuring and, when applicable, hedging the securities. When MS & Co. prices this offering
of securities, it will determine the economic terms of the securities such that for each security the estimated value on the Pricing
Date will be no lower than the minimum level described in “Additional Terms Specific To The Securities” on page 2.
MS
& Co. will conduct this offering in compliance with the requirements of FINRA Rule 5121 of the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc., which is commonly referred to as FINRA, regarding a FINRA member firm’s distribution of the securities
of an affiliate and related conflicts of interest. MS & Co. or any of our other affiliates may not make sales in this offering
to any discretionary account.
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