Morgan Stanley Launches First Spot Bitcoin ETF by Major US Bank
Morgan Stanley is set to debut its spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund on the NYSE Arca, marking the first time a major US commercial bank has offered direct Bitcoin exposure through an ETF.
The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT) will begin trading on 8 April 2026, following a listing notice from the New York Stock Exchange and final approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission.
How Will MSBT Compete in a Crowded Market
MSBT enters a market already dominated by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC), which have together attracted $74.3 billion in net inflows since January 2024, according to Farside Investors.
Despite entering later, Morgan Stanley has set an aggressive 0.14% annual fee, undercutting IBIT’s 0.25% and most other spot Bitcoin ETFs, potentially forcing competitors to reconsider their pricing strategies.
Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas commented,
“This bank happens to have 16k advisors managing $6T in assets. They are the ultimate gatekeepers of rich boomer money.”
Who Will Hold the Bitcoin and How It Will Work
Morgan Stanley has appointed Coinbase Custody and Bank of New York Mellon as custodians for the trust, with initial seed creation baskets expected to total about $1 million and 50,000 shares created ahead of listing.
The ETF holds actual Bitcoin, giving investors direct exposure without the complexities of private wallets or self-custody.
Is This Part of a Broader Crypto Push
MSBT is only the first of several crypto products planned by Morgan Stanley.
Earlier in 2026, the bank applied for a national trust banking charter to offer crypto custody, trading, and staking services.
It also filed to launch staked Ether and Solana ETFs, and plans to provide Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana trading through E*Trade via its partnership with Zerohash.
What Analysts Are Watching
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas confirmed the expected 8 April trading date, noting the smooth regulatory pathway now established for spot Bitcoin ETFs.
Analysts suggest the low fee structure could attract significant inflows, especially from cost-conscious institutional investors.
The debut is also expected to increase liquidity in Bitcoin markets and provide a regulated channel for conservative portfolios seeking digital asset exposure.
How Morgan Stanley Could Change Investor Access
By integrating MSBT into its wealth management platform, Morgan Stanley allows advisors to offer Bitcoin exposure within traditional brokerage accounts, simplifying access for institutional and retail clients alike.
This integration eliminates the technical barriers of handling digital wallets and positions Bitcoin alongside traditional investment options.
The launch of MSBT is likely to be closely watched by the financial industry, both as a measure of institutional appetite for Bitcoin and as a test of fee-driven competition among major ETF providers.