Morgan Stanley’s $116M Bitcoin ETF debut is tiny next to $1.9T, and that’s why Wall Street will notice

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Morgan Stanley launched its spot Bitcoin ETF on Apr. 8 on NYSE Arca, calling MSBT the first cryptocurrency ETP from a US bank-affiliated asset manager and pricing its sponsor fee at 0.14%, the lowest Bitcoin ETP sponsor fee.

By Apr. 16, Farside Investors’ data showed cumulative net inflows of $116 million across seven trading sessions.

Against Morgan Stanley Investment Management’s $1.9 trillion in assets under management as of Dec. 31, 2025, that figure represents roughly 0.006% of the platform. At the 0.14% fee rate, it would generate only about $162,400 in annual gross revenue if assets were held at that level.

What makes the MSBT launch harder to ignore is the competitive arithmetic.

A number that travels

At roughly $16.6 million of net inflows per session, MSBT has already surpassed BTCW, which Farside shows at $86 million in cumulative inflows.

For a late entrant launching into a choppy Bitcoin market, clearing an existing competitor’s total in less than two weeks establishes that brand, price, and distribution can still generate demand in a field already dominated by BlackRock’s IBIT at $64.3 billion and Fidelity’s FBTC at $10.8 billion.

A logarithmic bar chart shows MSBT’s $116 million in cumulative net inflows surpassing BTCW’s $86 million, while trailing FBTC at $10.8 billion and IBIT at $64.3 billion.

Morgan Stanley has converted “crypto access” into “crypto manufacturing.”

The filing was the first such move by a major US bank, and Morningstar’s Bryan Armor told Reuters that a bank’s entry into the crypto ETF market adds legitimacy and that others could follow.

Goldman Sachs filed for its first Bitcoin ETF product on Apr. 14, six days after MSBT launched. The timing reinforces the sense that the reputational barrier to bank-branded Bitcoin products is contracting fast.

Morgan Stanley’s own launch statement frames MSBT as part of a firmwide digital asset push spanning custody, trading, and product development. The fund is both a product decision and a positioning decision.

The 0.14% fee sets a price anchor that tells the market Morgan Stanley intends to compete on cost and trust, and reveals how it expects the category to evolve.

The battlefield is wide

Bank of America announced that advisers across its Private Bank, Merrill, and Merrill Edge platforms will be able to recommend crypto allocations starting Jan. 5, with no asset threshold.

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Charles Schwab said on Apr. 16 that it would begin a phased rollout of direct spot Bitcoin and Ethereum trading for retail clients in the coming weeks. Together, those moves show that the fight for Bitcoin’s next wave of capital runs through advice, brokerage access, and custody-integrated client experience.

Firm Move Date What it controls Why it matters
Morgan Stanley Launched MSBT Apr. 8 ETF wrapper Proves a bank-branded product can gather assets
Goldman Sachs Filed for first Bitcoin ETF product Apr. 14 ETF pipeline Signals peer response / shrinking stigma
Bank of America Advisers can recommend crypto allocations Jan. 5 Advice / distribution Opens crypto to mainstream wealth channels
Charles Schwab Rolling out direct BTC and ETH trading Apr. 16 Trading interface Captures client flow without needing its own ETF

MSBT demonstrates that a bank can wrap Bitcoin in a familiar product and attract money, while Bank of America and Schwab demonstrate that a bank can also capture the same client relationship simply by controlling the recommendation or the trading interface.

Firms that do neither now face a specific competitive pressure, as rivals are accumulating either the wrapper or the client touchpoint, and in some cases both.

Citi expects US ETF assets to more than double from roughly $10.4 trillion to $25 trillion by 2030, with active ETFs gaining share. Bitcoin products are competing inside an ETF industry already organized around fee compression, distribution control, and model-portfolio inclusion.

Late entrants in that environment tend to win through price and platform relationships, which is exactly the bet Morgan Stanley’s 0.14% fee implies.

The permission signal becomes a wave

If MSBT’s opening pace held, Farside arithmetic would place it near $498 million after 30 trading sessions and over $1 billion after 63 trading sessions.

The straight-line projection extrapolates the current pace into a scenario, and the direction it points toward carries real strategic weight.

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Goldman’s filing could convert into a launched product by late June, while other firms watching two major banks move within days of each other face a weaker internal case for inaction.

The Morningstar framing that bank entry adds legitimacy, and others could follow, acquiring more force each time a new institution moves.

For Bitcoin, that path produces an outcome measured in more bank-branded wrappers, meaning more conventional allocation pathways via adviser model portfolios, standard brokerage workflows, and custody-integrated access for clients who have never opened a crypto exchange account.

That makes demand stickier, slower-moving, and less dependent on retail sentiment cycles.

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