Morgan Stanley has filed an amended S-1 registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT), a spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) set to trade on NYSE Arca under the ticker MSBT.
The filing discloses a $1 million seed investment through the sale of 50,000 shares and outlines a custody structure involving Coinbase Custody, Bank of New York Mellon (BNY Mellon), and Fidelity. If approved, MSBT would be the first spot Bitcoin ETF issued directly by a major U.S. bank, signaling a strategic pivot for the $1.8 trillion wealth manager from distributing third-party products like BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) to capturing management fees in-house.
The move intensifies competition in the increasingly crowded crypto ETF market, where over 126 applications are currently pending SEC review and Goldman Sachs has already acquired ETF issuer Innovator for $2 billion.
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.
The economics explain the pivot to launching its own product. By issuing MSBT, Morgan Stanley will capture 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 potentially significant for market dynamics.
To attract early inflows, Morgan Stanley plans to waive fees on the first $5 billion invested in MSBT for six months, according to the amended filing. While the long-term management fee has not yet been disclosed, this promotional period positions the fund to compete aggressively against established products like BlackRock’s IBIT, which charges 0.25%, and Fidelity’s FBTC, also at 0.25%.
Whether Morgan Stanley ultimately prices below, at, or above that threshold will signal how aggressively the bank intends to compete for assets it currently helps its rivals accumulate.
The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust divides custody responsibilities among three major institutions to align with traditional institutional standards:
Coinbase Custody Trust Company: Handles physical Bitcoin storage in offline cold wallets, with private keys remaining disconnected from the internet to reduce hacking risks
Bank of New York Mellon (BNY Mellon) : Serves as cash custodian, fund administrator, and transfer agent, managing accounting, shareholder records, and cash flows
Fidelity: Added in the most recent amendment as an additional custodian, strengthening the fund’s reliability for institutional investors
The trust will calculate its daily net asset value using the CoinDesk Bitcoin Benchmark 4PM New York Settlement Rate, which aggregates trade data from major spot exchanges to determine the fund’s reference price.
MSBT will support both cash and in-kind creations and redemptions through a hybrid model:
Cash creation: An investor provides cash; an authorized participant uses those funds to purchase Bitcoin and deposit it into the fund; shares are issued to the investor
In-kind creation: An investor delivers actual Bitcoin to the fund in exchange for ETF shares
Authorized participants include Virtu Americas, Jane Street, and Macquarie Capital, which will create and redeem shares to keep the ETF’s market price aligned with Bitcoin’s underlying value.
The filing confirms an initial seed investment of 50,000 shares at approximately $20 per share, generating roughly $1 million in proceeds to purchase Bitcoin before the fund begins trading.
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:
Goldman Sachs acquired Bitcoin ETF issuer Innovator for $2 billion in 2025 and now holds $2.4 billion in crypto exchange-traded products
Merrill Lynch cleared its wealth advisors to recommend spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2026
Fidelity amended its Ethereum ETF filing in March to add staking
Eight XRP ETF applications remain pending, with analysts estimating approval could unlock $5 billion to $7 billion in immediate inflows
JPMorgan analysts project that pension funds and endowments could drive up to $130 billion in annual inflows into regulated crypto products during 2026.
Morgan Stanley is not limiting its crypto ETF ambitions to 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. However, the Solana filing has not been updated since its initial submission, suggesting the Bitcoin fund could launch first.
Beyond ETF products, Morgan Stanley is building proprietary Bitcoin custody and trading services internally. Amy Oldenburg, the bank’s newly appointed digital assets strategy head, stated at a February Bitcoin conference in Las Vegas: “We really need to build this out internally. We can’t just primarily rent the technology to do this.” Yield and lending services are also under exploration.
MSBT is the first spot Bitcoin ETF to be issued directly by a major U.S. bank rather than by a dedicated asset manager like BlackRock or Fidelity. It features a hybrid custody model utilizing three institutional custodians—Coinbase, BNY Mellon, and Fidelity—and offers a six-month fee waiver on the first $5 billion in assets.
The long-term management fee has not yet been disclosed in SEC filings. However, to attract early investors, Morgan Stanley will waive fees on the first $5 billion invested for six months. The ultimate fee structure will determine MSBT’s competitiveness against established products like BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC, which both charge 0.25%.
While not confirmed, the economic logic is compelling. Morgan Stanley currently earns only distribution commissions on competitor products like IBIT. By launching its own ETF, the bank would capture full management fees on assets it helps direct to MSBT. Whether Morgan Stanley continues offering rival products alongside its own will likely depend on client demand and the relative competitiveness of MSBT’s fee structure.