Morgan Stanley filed its second S-1 amendment with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin (BTC) Trust, a spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) set to trade under ticker MSBT on NYSE Arca.
If approved, MSBT would be the first spot Bitcoin ETF issued by a major US bank, marking a shift from distributing third-party products like BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) to capturing management fees directly.
Morgan Stanley began allowing its financial advisors to recommend Bitcoin ETFs to clients in August 2024, initially directing them toward existing products from BlackRock and Fidelity.
By early 2026, the bank’s more than 15,000 advisors had been authorized to proactively pitch Bitcoin ETFs rather than wait for client requests.
The economics explain the pivot. By issuing its own ETF, Morgan Stanley captures management fees estimated between 0.20% and 0.30% instead of earning distribution commissions on a competitor’s product.
The bank manages approximately $1.8 trillion in wealth management assets, making even a small allocation shift significant.
The updated filing confirms key operational details that earlier versions left open.
Morgan Stanley divided custody responsibilities between two institutions.
The fund will support both cash and in-kind creations and redemptions, a structure designed for institutional authorized participants who need flexibility in how they enter and exit positions.
Morgan Stanley is not stopping at Bitcoin. The bank filed for a spot Ethereum (ETH) ETF on January 7, 2026, which will include staking provisions. A Solana (SOL) Trust filed one day earlier plans to stake a portion of its holdings and distribute rewards to shareholders quarterly.
The SEC is currently reviewing more than 126 pending crypto ETF applications as of March 2026. Morgan Stanley enters a field where competition is accelerating rapidly.
JPMorgan analysts project that pension funds and endowments could drive up to $130 billion in annual inflows into regulated crypto products during 2026.
The management fee, which the filing left undisclosed, will determine how competitive MSBT is against BlackRock’s IBIT at 0.25% and Fidelity’s FBTC at 0.25%.
Whether Morgan Stanley prices below, at, or above that threshold will signal how aggressively the bank intends to compete for assets it currently helps its rivals collect.