TLDRs;
- Morgan Stanley stock traded higher after backing Vestwell’s $385 million Series E funding round.
- Vestwell’s valuation has more than doubled since 2023 as assets and active savers grow rapidly.
- Payroll-integrated savings platforms are attracting investors as fintech shifts toward profitable infrastructure models.
- New funding will support AI-driven personalization and expanded savings options beyond retirement.
Shares of Morgan Stanley traded modestly higher after the investment bank was disclosed as a participant in a $385 million Series E funding round for Vestwell, a fast-growing U.S. savings and retirement infrastructure provider. The investment signaled continued institutional confidence in profitable fintech platforms that sit behind payroll systems, employers, and government programs rather than consumer-facing apps.
Vestwell said the new capital brings its total funding to $660 million and more than doubles its valuation since 2023, underscoring accelerating momentum as employers and public-sector entities modernize how Americans save. Other investors in the round included Blue Owl Capital and Sixth Street Growth.
Morgan Stanley backs fintech infrastructure
For Morgan Stanley, the deal reflects a strategic tilt toward financial infrastructure companies that generate recurring revenue and embed deeply into institutional workflows. Rather than offering retirement plans directly to consumers, Vestwell operates as a technology backbone, enabling employers, payroll providers, financial institutions, and governments to offer savings products at scale.
Investors have increasingly favored this model as fintech funding has shifted away from high-burn consumer apps toward companies that demonstrate profitability and durable distribution. Vestwell reported profitable growth, an increasingly rare distinction in the savings and retirement technology space.
Market participants appeared to view Morgan Stanley’s participation as a validation of Vestwell’s long-term role in the U.S. retirement and savings ecosystem, helping lift MS shares despite a mixed broader market backdrop.
Vestwell’s scale keeps growing
Vestwell currently supports more than 2 million active savers and manages over $50 billion in assets across its platform. Its reach has expanded rapidly by integrating directly into payroll and administrative systems that employees already use, reducing friction and boosting participation.
@Vestwell, a digital savings platform, has raised $385M in a Series E funding round co-led by Blue Owl Capital and Sixth Street Growth. Its new valuation is $2B, double the $1B valuation it achieved in December 2023. Vestwell is growing “profitably,” according to CEO Aaron… pic.twitter.com/mJgp5fBI4J
— Mary Ann Azevedo (@bayareawriter) February 18, 2026
A major catalyst was Vestwell’s Accrue 401(k) acquisition, completed in January 2026. The deal added nearly 30,000 retirement plans and about 350,000 savers to its platform, while preserving operating partnerships with major payroll and finance tools such as Intuit QuickBooks, Rippling, and Square.
Beyond the private sector, Vestwell has also become a critical technology provider to public programs. The company says it powers technology for over 40 government savings initiatives, accounting for an estimated 85% of U.S. government retirement savings programs.
Payroll-first savings model gains traction
The Series E funding highlights a broader structural shift in how Americans save. Rather than relying on standalone apps, savings is increasingly embedded directly into payroll systems, where participation is significantly higher.
Research consistently shows that workers are far more likely to save when a workplace plan is available, a dynamic that favors platforms like Vestwell that integrate seamlessly with employers and institutions. Its platform supports retirement savings, workplace emergency funds, and education-related savings, all delivered through trusted intermediaries.
This approach also puts pressure on legacy financial institutions still running older retirement recordkeeping systems. Vestwell’s pitch centers on modernizing that infrastructure while extending access across income levels and communities.





