Bitcoin Magazine
Morgan Stanley Becomes Official First US Bank To Launch A Spot Bitcoin ETF
Banking giant Morgan Stanley launched its spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund today, opening a new front in the battle for dominance in the growing U.S. crypto ETF market and setting up a direct challenge to BlackRock’s flagship iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT).
The new fund, trading under the ticker MSBT, began trading April 8 on NYSE Arca with an expense ratio of 0.14%, the lowest among spot bitcoin ETFs. The pricing undercuts IBIT’s 0.25% fee and signals a shift toward cost competition in a market where products offer near-identical exposure to bitcoin’s price.
Spot bitcoin ETFs hold bitcoin directly and track its market value, leaving fees, liquidity, and distribution as the main differentiators. Since their debut in early 2024, the sector has drawn tens of billions in inflows, with IBIT emerging as the clear leader. The fund controls about $55 billion in assets and dominates both trading volume and options activity.
Morgan Stanley’s entry introduces a different kind of advantage. The bank’s wealth management division oversees more than $6 trillion in client assets and includes thousands of financial advisors who can allocate capital through internal platforms.
This distribution network provides direct access to a large pool of investors, many of whom have not yet adopted bitcoin exposure through ETFs.
BREAKING: Morgan Stanley announces the launch of its spot Bitcoin ETF. pic.twitter.com/WfqbeMmjP2— Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) April 8, 2026
Morgan Stanley is jumping on the bitcoin train
Industry analysts describe this as a structural shift. Early ETF inflows came from self-directed investors who favored liquidity and brand recognition. As financial advisors play a larger role in portfolio construction, products integrated into advisory platforms may capture a greater share of new allocations.
Morgan Stanley has already signaled openness to bitcoin exposure within client portfolios, with internal guidance allowing allocations of up to 4% depending on risk tolerance. The launch of MSBT gives advisors a house-branded option with a lower fee, which may reduce friction when recommending crypto exposure.
Despite the new competition, IBIT retains a strong position. Its deep liquidity supports large trades and active strategies, which remain critical for institutional investors and traders. Replicating that level of market depth may take time, even with Morgan Stanley’s scale.
The result is a market that may split along functional lines. IBIT offers liquidity and established trading infrastructure. MSBT emphasizes cost efficiency and distribution reach. Both approaches reflect how institutional demand for bitcoin exposure continues to evolve.
The launch also carries broader implications for traditional finance. Morgan Stanley becomes the first major U.S. bank to issue and list its own spot bitcoin ETF, ma

