Morgan Stanley has taken another concrete step into crypto markets after filing a Form S-1 registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Jan. 6, positioning the bank to launch a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund if approved.
The proposed product, named the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust, would track the price of bitcoin directly, marking a shift from distributing third-party crypto products to building in-house vehicles.
Morgan Stanley Targets Simple, Price-Tracking Bitcoin ETF
The filing shows that the trust is structured as a passive ETF designed to mirror Bitcoin’s price performance in U.S. dollars, minus fees and expenses. It will hold bitcoin directly rather than using leverage, derivatives, or active trading strategies.
Source: SEC
Net asset value will be calculated daily using a pricing benchmark derived from aggregated activity across major spot bitcoin exchanges.
Shares are expected to list on a national securities exchange under a ticker that has not yet been disclosed, subject to SEC approval.
Morgan Stanley Investment Management will sponsor the trust, while custody and operational oversight will be handled by designated service providers. Shares will be created and redeemed only in large blocks by authorized participants, either in cash or in kind.
For cash creations and redemptions, third-party bitcoin counterparties will execute trades on behalf of the trust, with trading costs borne by the authorized participants.
Retail investors will not be able to redeem shares directly and will instead trade them on the secondary market through brokerage accounts, where prices may deviate slightly from net asset value depending on market conditions.
The filing comes as spot bitcoin ETFs continue to expand rapidly in the U.S. market. Data shows these products now hold more than $123 billion in net assets, representing about 6.6% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization.
Total net assets held by Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. Source: Sosovalue
Net inflows have exceeded $1.1 billion since the start of the year, with Bitcoin trading near $93,800 as of Jan. 5.
BlackRock’s spot bitcoin ETF has emerged as one of the firm’s largest revenue drivers, with allocations nearing $100 billion, showing the fee potential of these products.
Morgan Stanley Pushes Crypto Further Into Mainstream Portfolios
Morgan Stanley’s move also follows its filing for a Solana-tracking trust, showing a broader push into crypto-linked investment vehicles. Solana trusts have already grown past $1 billion in total net assets after attracting nearly $800 million in cumulative inflows.
Total net assets of Solana Trust Source: Sosovalue
Together, the filings point to a strategy aimed at capturing more of the economics of crypto investing rather than outsourcing exposure to competitors.
Unlike asset managers that focus primarily on fund distribution, Morgan Stanley operates the world’s largest wealth management business, overseeing roughly $8.2 trillion in client assets.
The timing of the S-1 filing aligns with a broader regulatory and commercial shift. Morgan Stanley is also preparing to roll out direct crypto trading for Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana through its E-Trade platform, pending regulatory approval from the Federal Reserve.
The bank has cited a more permissive U.S. regulatory stance as a factor behind expanding its digital asset offerings.
For investors, the proposed trust would provide regulated bitcoin exposure through familiar brokerage infrastructure, avoiding the operational complexities of self-custody.
As with other spot ETFs, the structure is designed to keep share prices closely aligned with the underlying asset through daily creation and redemption mechanisms, addressing issues that plagued earlier trust models that traded at persistent premiums or discounts.
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