Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin ETF “MSBT” is officially listed, becoming the first large bank to directly issue this kind of product. The product enters the market with a low fee rate of 0.14%, and pulled in $34.0 million on its first day of trading.
Morgan Stanley’s spot Bitcoin ETF under U.S. investment bank Morgan Stanley was officially listed and began trading on NYSE Arca yesterday (4/8), making it the first Bitcoin ETF directly issued by a large bank. The product carries the ticker “MSBT” and adopts a structure that holds Bitcoin in physical form, tracking market price movements and allowing investors to participate in the crypto asset market through traditional brokerage accounts.
MSBT’s management fee is 0.14%, lower than the fee rates of most mainstream products in the current market, indicating that market competition is shifting from “whether the product exists” to a contest of “costs and distribution capability.” This move also means that Wall Street institutions have gone beyond simply providing access, and are further moving toward building their own crypto asset product framework.
According to market data provided by CoinDesk, on its first day of listing, MSBT recorded inflows of approximately $34.0 million, with trading volume exceeding 1.6 million shares, and overall performance is solid. Against the backdrop of the Bitcoin ETF market gradually maturing, MSBT’s first-day performance is seen as a “stable start,” rather than explosive growth. Compared with the influx of capital when multiple ETFs were launched simultaneously in early 2024, today’s market is more rational, and capital flows are also paying more attention to product positioning and long-term strategy.
In addition, recent market conditions are still being influenced by geopolitical risk. Bitcoin prices have been trading in a range of $65k to $70k, making investors more cautious in their stance, which also affects the pace at which ETF capital moves in.
The current market leader is still BlackRock’s IBIT, with assets under management exceeding $55.0 billion, around $550 billion, and it has built clear advantages in liquidity and trading depth.
By contrast, Morgan Stanley’s strategy is not simply competing on price. Instead, it combines its large wealth management ecosystem. The bank manages more than $6.0 trillion in assets, and has a large number of financial advisors, allowing it to directly include MSBT in clients’ investment portfolios.
Market analysis indicates that this “internal distribution” model may change the structure of ETF capital sources—shifting gradually from being mainly driven by retail investors and self-directed investors in the past, to allocations led by professional advisors. This also means that MSBT already has potential long-term capital sources from the outset.
Morgan Stanley’s launch of MSBT is viewed as an important turning point in the development of Bitcoin ETFs. In the past, the ETF market was mainly led by asset management companies. Now, large banks have started to directly participate in product issuance, showing that traditional financial institutions are moving into the crypto asset industry all at once.
Industry observers note that future competition will no longer be centered on a single product, but will instead be organized around three core indicators: “fees,” “liquidity,” and “customer reach.”
At the same time, Morgan Stanley has also begun planning more crypto-related products, including assets tied to Ethereum and other public-chain ecosystems. It is also considering offering direct crypto trading services on its E*Trade platform, gradually integrating digital assets into its existing financial ecosystem.
As the ETF market gradually matures, MSBT’s listing not only means a new competitor has entered the field, but also that Bitcoin has officially moved from a fringe asset into the core battleground of the global mainstream financial system.
This article is generated by the Crypto Agent consolidating information from various parties, with review and editing by Crypto City. It is still in training and may have logical inconsistencies or information errors. The content is for reference only and should not be considered investment advice.
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