MSBT Listing Signals New Bitcoin ETF Battle
Morgan Stanley’s push into spot bitcoin ETFs appears to be entering its final stretch. The firm’s proposed Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust, trading under the ticker MSBT, has received an official NYSE Arca listing announcement, a development Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said usually signals that a launch is close.
The trust’s latest SEC filing shows it is structured as a physical spot bitcoin fund that aims to track bitcoin’s price without leverage or derivatives. The filing, dated March 17, says the fund is expected to list on NYSE Arca and hold bitcoin directly.
It also outlines a seed structure of 50,000 shares, or about $1 million, giving investors a clearer view of how Morgan Stanley plans to bring the product to market.
The missing piece is the fee. Morgan Stanley has not yet disclosed it in the public filing, but Balchunas said the market will watch it closely and set his estimate at 0.24%, just below Blackrock’s 0.25% fee on the iShares Bitcoin Trust, IBIT.
Fidelity’s FBTC also charges 25 basis points, which means even a one-basis-point cut from Morgan Stanley would be a direct competitive shot at the two biggest traditional finance names in the category.
Why this matters goes beyond price, as Blackrock still has the scale advantage. IBIT had roughly $55.8 billion in net assets as of March 25, 2026, and Blackrock says it has been the most traded U.S. spot bitcoin ETP since launch. Fidelity, meanwhile, remains a major low-cost rival with a long crypto track record.
Morgan Stanley’s edge is distribution. The bank reported $9.3 trillion in client assets across Wealth and Investment Management at the end of 2025. A successful MSBT debut would not just add another ticker.
It would bring one of Wall Street’s largest advisory machines fully into the fee war, tightening competition and potentially widening bitcoin ETF adoption across mainstream portfolios.
FAQ 🇺🇸
- What is MSBT?
MSBT is Morgan Stanley’s proposed spot Bitcoin ETF, designed to give investors direct price exposure to bitcoin through a traditional exchange-traded fund structure. - Has the ETF launched yet in the U.S.?
Not yet. But the NYSE Arca listing notice suggests launch preparations are well advanced. - Why does this matter for Blackrock and Fidelity?
Morgan Stanley could add fresh fee pressure in a market where BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC both currently sit at 0.25%. - What could this mean for U.S. Bitcoin ETF investors?
More competition usually means tighter fees, stronger distribution, and broader access through traditional brokerage and advisory channels.

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