Morgan Stanley submitted registration statements to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for spot Bitcoin and Solana exchange-traded funds on January 6, 2026. The sixth-largest U.S. bank by assets under management filed for the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust and Morgan Stanley Solana Trust.
The Bitcoin Trust will track the price of Bitcoin, net of fees and expenses. The fund will hold Bitcoin directly rather than using derivatives or leverage. Its net asset value will be calculated daily using a pricing benchmark from major spot exchanges.
The Solana Trust is structured to track the price of Solana. Both products are passive and will not attempt to trade based on market conditions. Shares will be created and redeemed in large blocks by authorized participants, either in cash or in kind.
Retail investors will be able to buy and sell shares on the secondary market through brokerage accounts. The funds have not yet disclosed ticker symbols. The shares are expected to list on a national securities exchange if approved.
Morgan Stanley manages roughly 20 ETFs across brands including Calvert and Eaton Vance. Only two currently carry the Morgan Stanley name. This branding decision is rare for the firm.
Bloomberg Intelligence analyst James Seyffart expressed surprise at the filings. He said he has been predicting for years that major firms would change their stance on crypto. The move represents a shift from distributing third-party crypto products to building in-house vehicles.
Until October 2024, Morgan Stanley advisors were barred from buying crypto ETFs for clients. The firm then began recommending crypto allocations of up to 4% in its most aggressive client portfolios. This placed Morgan Stanley alongside BlackRock and Fidelity in offering crypto access.
The bank operates a wealth management arm with thousands of advisors who opened crypto access to clients in October. By using its own ETFs, Morgan Stanley can keep management fees in-house rather than paying competitors. This vertical integration allows the bank to direct client capital into proprietary products.
Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas called the move smart. He said Morgan Stanley could use the funds for its “bring your own assets” ETF strategy. This could prompt other major investment firms to launch in-house branded Bitcoin ETFs.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have grown to $123 billion in total net assets, according to SoSoValue data. This represents 6.57% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization. The products have seen over $1.2 billion in flows during the first two trading days of 2025.
Monday’s $697 million in net inflows was the largest daily total since October. At this pace, spot Bitcoin ETFs could see $150 billion in annual flows, Balchunas said. BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETFs became the firm’s top revenue source in November 2024, with allocations nearing $100 billion.
Spot Solana ETFs have grown to more than $1 billion in total net assets. These funds have seen a cumulative net inflow of nearly $800 million. The filing shows Morgan Stanley’s deeper commitment to digital assets.
Cash transactions for the Bitcoin Trust will be executed through third-party Bitcoin counterparties selected by the sponsor. The Trust is sponsored by Morgan Stanley Investment Management. Both filings follow the rapid expansion of spot Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. market over the past two years.
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