Morgan Stanley filed paperwork with regulators on March 17 to launch its own Bitcoin ETF called MSBT. This makes Morgan Stanley the first major US bank to issue a Bitcoin ETF directly rather than just recommend other companies’ products.
The move puts the bank in direct competition with BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC.
Morgan Stanley filed an amended S-1 form with the Securities and Exchange Commission. This was the second amendment, which means Morgan Stanley has been refining details based on regulator feedback. Filing amendments signals the launch is getting close, usually within weeks of the final version.
The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust will trade under ticker MSBT on NYSE Arca, a stock exchange owned by the New York Stock Exchange that specializes in ETFs.
What makes this significant is Morgan Stanley’s role change. Previously, the bank recommended Bitcoin ETFs from other companies like BlackRock to its wealth management clients. Now, Morgan Stanley will own and operate the product itself. This shift means keeping management fees instead of passing clients to competitors.
Other big banks like Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan still only distribute or custody Bitcoin products. Morgan Stanley is the first to actually issue one.
MSBT uses BNY Mellon and Coinbase Custody to store Bitcoin. Basket size is 10,000 shares.
Large firms called authorized participants create or destroy shares in 10,000-share blocks. When demand rises, they create baskets. When they fall, they redeem. This keeps the ETF price close to Bitcoin’s actual value. Jane Street and Virtu Americas handle this for MSBT.
MSBT Mentioning Firms In S-1 | Source: X
Morgan Stanley put in $1 million as seed capital. This buys the first Bitcoin going into trust before shares trade publicly.
Fee structure reveals competitive strategy. Bitcoin ETFs charge an annual fee as a percentage of assets under management. AUM means the total dollar value of investor money in the fund. Higher AUM means more revenue.
Morgan Stanley is offering a fee waiver on the first $5 billion AUM for six months. Waiver means zero fees temporarily. It copies BlackRock and Fidelity tactics from January 2024 launches. Both offered waivers to attract investors and build AUM quickly. Morgan Stanley is using the same playbook for market share.
Eleven Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024 after years of delays. Together, they accumulated over $100 billion in AUM at their peak. BlackRock’s IBIT became the market leader. Fidelity’s FBTC took second. Grayscale’s GBTC came third.
The market saw some outflows in 2026. About $4.5 billion left year-to-date as Bitcoin dropped from $108,000 toward $74,000. But products still hold roughly 7% of all Bitcoin in circulation. Institutional investors, such as pension funds and advisors, own 27-57% of shares, according to regulatory filings.
Current Bitcoin ETF Stash | Source: X
Morgan Stanley entering signals the next phase. Major banks are shifting from just recommending products to actually issuing them. Over 60% of top banks now provide cryptocurrency exposure. The race for market share is intensifying.
Analysts project Bitcoin ETF AUM could reach $180-220 billion by the end of 2026 as more institutions invest and products launch.
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