- Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin ETF pulls $100M in just six days
- Lowest fee in the market at 0.14%, undercutting BlackRock
- Massive advisor network could drive billions in future inflows
Morgan Stanley didn’t just enter the Bitcoin ETF race, it kind of kicked the door open. Its new fund, MSBT, launched on April 8 and quickly pulled in $100 million within six trading days, which is already turning heads across the industry.

Even more impressive, the ETF brought in $30.6 million on its very first day, making it the strongest ETF debut in the firm’s history, across all asset classes. In a market that’s been leaning cautious lately, that kind of demand feels… deliberate, not accidental.
The Fee Play Is the Real Story
What really sets MSBT apart isn’t just the inflows, it’s the pricing strategy. At a 0.14% fee, it’s now the cheapest spot Bitcoin ETF available, undercutting BlackRock’s IBIT, which charges 0.25%.
That difference might seem small on paper, but for large allocations, it adds up fast. A $100 million position in MSBT saves about $110,000 annually compared to IBIT, and for institutional players, that’s more than enough reason to reconsider where capital flows.
A Distribution Advantage Nobody Else Has
Beyond fees, Morgan Stanley brings something else to the table that most competitors can’t match, scale. With $1.9 trillion in assets under management and around 16,000 financial advisors, the firm has a built-in distribution machine that hasn’t even fully activated yet.

Once that network starts pushing the product more aggressively, inflows could accelerate quickly, maybe faster than expected. The early $100 million looks small in that context, almost like a preview rather than the main event.
This Is Likely Just the Beginning
MSBT doesn’t look like a one-off launch, it feels more like the first move in a broader crypto strategy. Morgan Stanley has already signaled plans to roll out retail crypto trading through E*Trade, covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana sometime in 2026.
That suggests a much bigger play is unfolding, one where ETFs, trading access, and infrastructure all connect into a larger ecosystem. And if that’s the case, then this fee war with BlackRock might just be the opening chapter, not the main story.











