Latest crypto: Morgan Stanley’s MSBT launches

The latest crypto milestone arrived Wednesday when Morgan Stanley officially launched the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust on NYSE Arca under the ticker MSBT, becoming the first major US bank to issue a spot bitcoin ETF directly under its own name, charging 0.14% annually — the lowest fee in the entire spot bitcoin ETF market.

Summary

  • MSBT began trading April 8 on NYSE Arca, undercutting every existing competitor on cost: BlackRock’s IBIT charges 0.25%, Fidelity’s FBTC charges 0.25%, and even Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust at 0.15% now trails the new fund
  • Morgan Stanley employs approximately 16,000 financial advisors managing $9.3 trillion in client assets; those advisors could previously recommend third-party bitcoin ETFs from BlackRock or Fidelity, but MSBT keeps the management fee in-house for the first time
  • The fund holds physical bitcoin with Coinbase Custody providing cold storage and BNY Mellon handling cash custody and administration; MSBT is part of a broader push that includes planned Ethereum and Solana ETF filings and retail crypto trading through E*Trade in the first half of 2026

The latest crypto landmark was set Wednesday when Morgan Stanley launched MSBT on NYSE Arca, crossing a threshold no major Wall Street bank had crossed before: issuing a spot bitcoin ETF under its own name rather than directing clients to third-party products. Every other spot bitcoin ETF currently trading was issued by an asset management firm. MSBT is the first issued by a commercial bank.

The fund holds physical bitcoin, uses no leverage or derivatives, and tracks the spot price directly. BNY Mellon serves as cash custodian and administrator. Coinbase Custody holds the bitcoin in cold storage. The seed basket launched with 50,000 shares and approximately $1 million in initial capital.

At 0.14% annually, MSBT is now the cheapest spot bitcoin ETF available in the US market. For an institutional allocator deploying $10 million, the 11-basis-point gap versus BlackRock’s IBIT translates to $11,000 in annual savings. Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust at 0.15%, previously the market’s lowest-cost option, now sits in second place.

BlackRock’s IBIT holds approximately $70.6 billion in assets and commands roughly 45% of the entire spot bitcoin ETF market, a concentration built on deep liquidity and institutional recognition. Morgan Stanley cannot match that liquidity on day one, but it brings something IBIT does not: a proprietary distribution network of 16,000 advisors who now have a house-branded option that keeps fees within the bank.

What Morgan Stanley’s Move Signals for Institutionalization

As crypto.news reported at the time of the initial S-1 filing, Bitwise advisor Jeff Park argued the launch confirmed that the total addressable market for bitcoin ETFs is considerably larger than even crypto professionals anticipated — because Morgan Stanley would not build a branded product unless its proprietary wealth channels showed sufficient demand to justify it.

The MSBT launch is also one piece of a broader institutional crypto buildout. As crypto.news noted, the bank has filed separately for an Ethereum trust and a Solana trust, applied to the OCC for a National Trust Bank Charter covering digital asset custody and staking, and plans to roll out retail crypto trading on E*Trade with Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana before the end of the first half of 2026.

The bank that published a research note in 2017 suggesting bitcoin’s true value could be zero now runs the cheapest bitcoin ETF on the US market. Market participants will watch early MSBT inflows closely to determine whether Morgan Stanley’s distribution strength can begin to challenge IBIT’s first-mover lead.

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