Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF Record-Breaking Launch

Morgan Stanley Investment Management launched the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT) on NYSE Arca on April 8, 2026, pulling in $30.6 million in net inflows on its first trading day and becoming the first U.S. bank-affiliated asset manager to offer a cryptocurrency exchange-traded product.

The debut marked what Amy Oldenburg called “the best first day of trading for any of our ETFs,” a milestone that positions MSBT as a standout within Morgan Stanley’s own product lineup, though not necessarily a record across the broader U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market.

“It was the best first day of trading for any of our ETFs.”

Amy Oldenburg, via Blockhead

What Made the MSBT Launch Stand Out

WHAT TO KNOW

  • First bank-affiliated crypto ETP: Morgan Stanley says MSIM is the first U.S. bank-affiliated asset manager to bring a cryptocurrency ETP to market.
  • Record is internal, not market-wide: The “record-breaking” label applies to Morgan Stanley’s own ETF history; several spot Bitcoin ETFs posted larger day-one inflows when the original U.S. cohort launched in January 2024.

MSBT launched with a 0.14% sponsor fee, which Morgan Stanley described as the lowest bitcoin ETP sponsor fee at the time of the announcement. The trust tracks the CoinDesk Bitcoin Benchmark 4PM NY Settlement Rate.

The SEC filing trail confirms the product’s regulatory footing. Morgan Stanley’s March 25, 2026 Form 8-A registered the trust’s common units under Section 12(b), and NYSE Arca approved the listing application ahead of the April 8 trading start.

On day two, MSBT added another $14.9 million in net inflows, bringing its cumulative total to $45.5 million across two trading sessions. That follow-through suggests early institutional interest held rather than fading after the novelty of launch day.

Why a Major Bank Entering Bitcoin ETFs Matters

Morgan Stanley’s entry carries weight because of the firm’s distribution network. Unlike crypto-native issuers, a bank-affiliated manager can funnel the product directly to its existing wealth management clients, a channel that has historically been difficult for Bitcoin products to penetrate.

The timing is notable. MSBT launched while the Fear & Greed Index sat at 12, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory. Bitcoin itself traded near $71,029, down roughly 1.1% over the prior 24 hours. A major institutional debut landing against that risk-off backdrop suggests the launch was supply-driven rather than timed to capitalize on retail euphoria.

CoinMetrics price chart for Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF Record Breaking Launch!
CoinMetrics metrics view used to back the on-chain section for bitcoin.

The fee war among spot Bitcoin ETF issuers continues to compress costs for investors. MSBT’s 0.14% fee undercuts several existing products, though fee waivers from competitors like BlackRock and Fidelity have temporarily brought effective costs even lower. For readers tracking broader market positioning, the fee pressure signals that issuers see long-term volume as worth subsidizing now.

What Investors Should Watch Next

The $45.5 million in two-day flows is a solid start, but the real test comes over the next several weeks. Sustained inflows beyond the launch window will determine whether MSBT can build meaningful assets under management or settles into the lower tier of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs.

Several developments deserve attention. First, whether Morgan Stanley’s wealth advisory channel begins actively recommending MSBT to clients, which would show up as a step-change in daily flow patterns. Second, how the competitive fee landscape shifts in response, particularly from issuers who had already been expanding their crypto infrastructure.

CoinGlass liquidations chart for Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF Record Breaking Launch!
CoinGlass market-structure view used for the leverage and volatility section on bitcoin.

Third, the broader regulatory environment. MSBT’s fund materials warn that evolving U.S. digital-asset regulation could materially affect the investment. Any new rulemaking around crypto ETPs would directly impact the product’s structure and compliance costs.

It is also worth distinguishing confirmed launch data from early market narratives. The “record-breaking” framing applies specifically to Morgan Stanley’s internal ETF history, not to the U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market as a whole, where several funds posted significantly larger day-one inflows when they debuted in January 2024.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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