Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF Filing Advances With MSBT Ticker on NYSE Arca

Bitcoins

Morgan Stanley inches closer to launching its own spot bitcoin ETF, signaling Wall Street’s appetite for direct exposure isn’t fading anytime soon.

Bitcoins Morgan Stanley Expands Crypto Push With Spot Bitcoin ETF Filing

Morgan Stanley Investment Management has filed an updated S-1 registration statement for the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust, or MSBT, advancing the proposed spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund toward a potential listing on NYSE Arca. The amendment, submitted around March 17–18, confirms the ticker and adds operational clarity, though approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) remains pending.

The move places Morgan Stanley among the largest traditional financial institutions attempting to issue a spot bitcoin ETF directly, rather than merely offering client access to third-party products. It follows the 2024 wave of approvals that opened the door for firms like Blackrock to dominate early inflows.

At its core, MSBT is a straightforward product. The trust is designed to passively track bitcoin’s price using the Coindesk Bitcoin Benchmark 4 p.m. New York settlement rate, holding only spot bitcoin without leverage, derivatives, or active trading strategies.

Shares in the trust would represent fractional ownership of its bitcoin holdings and trade on the secondary market like traditional ETFs. Pricing transparency is expected through an intraday indicative value updated every 15 seconds, aligning it with existing spot bitcoin ETF structures.

One missing piece remains the fee. The filing outlines a unitary “delegated sponsor fee,” but the exact percentage is still redacted, leaving investors waiting to see how aggressively Morgan Stanley plans to compete on cost.

The operational backbone leans heavily on established players. Custody will be handled by Coinbase Custody Trust Company and the Bank of New York Mellon, with the majority of assets stored in offline cold storage systems designed to reduce hacking risks.

Authorized participants include familiar market makers such as Virtu Americas, Jane Street, and Macquarie Capital, suggesting the trust is being built with liquidity and arbitrage efficiency in mind from day one.

The fund also introduces a hybrid creation and redemption model, allowing both in-kind bitcoin transfers and cash-based transactions. While flexible, the cash route shifts slippage risk to authorized participants, a detail that may quietly shape how institutions interact with the product.

Risk disclosures in the filing are blunt. Bitcoin’s history of steep drawdowns, custody vulnerabilities, regulatory uncertainty, and potential tracking deviations all make an appearance. The trust also emphasizes that it generates no income and offers no capital protection—hardly a surprise, but clearly spelled out.

The broader context matters. Morgan Stanley, with roughly $1.9 trillion in assets under management across the firm, entering the issuer side of bitcoin ETFs signals a shift from cautious participation to direct competition for fee revenue.

With more than 100 crypto ETF applications reportedly still circulating at the SEC, MSBT is one of many filings, but its pedigree gives it weight. If approved, it would reinforce the idea that bitcoin exposure is becoming a standard offering across major financial institutions.

For now, the trust remains in regulatory limbo. The SEC must declare the registration effective, and NYSE Arca must approve the listing before shares can begin trading. Until then, MSBT sits in that familiar pre-launch state: fully designed, widely discussed, and waiting on Washington.

Bitcoins FAQ 🔎

  • What is the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT)?
    A proposed spot bitcoin ETF designed to track bitcoin’s price through direct holdings of the asset.
  • Has the MSBT ETF been approved yet?
    No, it still requires SEC approval and exchange listing authorization before trading can begin.
  • Who will custody the bitcoin for MSBT?
    Coinbase Custody Trust Company and the Bank of New York Mellon will hold the assets.
  • What makes MSBT different from other bitcoin ETFs?
    It represents a major U.S. bank issuing its own spot bitcoin ETF rather than relying on third-party products.

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