Bitcoin News: Morgan Stanley Just Launched the Cheapest Bitcoin ETF on the Market

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By Sam Daodu Published

Quick Read

  • Morgan Stanley’s MSBT charges 0.14% per year, undercutting BlackRock’s IBIT at 0.25% to become the cheapest spot Bitcoin ETF on the market.

  • MSBT pulled in $34 million on its first day of trading and purchased 430 BTC, putting it in the top 1% of all ETF launches over the past year.

  • Morgan Stanley’s 16,000 financial advisors have been recommending Bitcoin ETFs since 2024 and can now direct clients into MSBT instead of sending money to competitors like BlackRock or Fidelity.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.

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Bitcoin News: Morgan Stanley Just Launched the Cheapest Bitcoin ETF on the Market

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Morgan Stanley once called Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) worthless. In 2017, the bank’s analysts published a research note arguing that Bitcoin’s true value could be zero. Nine years later, Morgan Stanley has launched its own spot Bitcoin ETF, making it the first major U.S. bank to issue one under its own name.

The fund trades under the ticker MSBT and charges 0.14% per year, which is less than any other spot Bitcoin ETF on the market, including BlackRock’s IBIT at 0.25%. Morgan Stanley also has around 16,000 financial advisors who can now direct clients straight into MSBT when they want Bitcoin exposure. Its distribution network is what makes this launch different from every other Bitcoin ETF that came before it.

MSBT Off to a Strong Start With $34 Million on Day One

ETF exchange traded funds concept. Graph with ETF on the laptop keyboard with trade workstation app on the screen. 3d illustration
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Morgan Stanley’s MSBT pulled in around $34 million in net inflows on its first day of trading, with over 1.6 million shares changing hands. The fund purchased 430 BTC on day one, and Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said the debut put MSBT in the top 1% of all ETF launches over the past year. Most new ETFs average $1 million or less on their first day, so $34 million is a strong opening for a product entering a market that BlackRock has dominated since early 2024.

Bitcoin ETFs had just posted their first positive monthly inflows of 2026 in March, pulling in $1.32 billion after four straight months of outflows. The turnaround gave MSBT a tailwind on launch day, and its 0.14% fee makes it cheaper than every other spot Bitcoin ETF available right now.

Bitcoin ETF Ticker Annual Fee
Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust MSBT 0.14%
Grayscale Bitcoin Mini Trust BTC 0.15%
Bitwise Bitcoin ETF BITB 0.20%
ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF ARKB 0.21%
BlackRock iShares Bitcoin Trust IBIT 0.25%
Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund FBTC 0.25%

For most people buying Bitcoin through a brokerage, the fee difference between MSBT and IBIT is barely noticeable. On a $10,000 position, for example, it works out to about $11 per year. But for wealth management clients allocating six or seven figures, those savings add up over time.

Morgan Stanley’s 16,000 Advisors Are the Real Advantage

Bitcoin Cryptocurrency ETF, exchange traded funds concept
24K-Production / Shutterstock.com

Up until now, every spot Bitcoin ETF came from an asset manager like BlackRock, Fidelity, or ARK. Morgan Stanley is a bank with around 16,000 financial advisors who manage money for clients directly. Those advisors have been recommending Bitcoin ETFs to clients since 2024, but the money was going to BlackRock or Fidelity. With MSBT, the management fee stays at Morgan Stanley.

When a Morgan Stanley advisor tells a client to put 2% to 4% of their portfolio into Bitcoin, which is what the firm has been recommending, they are now going to point them toward MSBT first. The client doesn’t go shopping for the cheapest Bitcoin ETF on a comparison site—they’ll most likely take their advisor’s recommendation and move on. BlackRock doesn’t have direct access to clients like that, and that is what makes MSBT a real competitor even with a fraction of IBIT’s assets.

The bank also filed for Ethereum and Solana trusts in January 2026, and it plans to launch retail crypto trading on E*Trade in the first half of this year. MSBT looks like the first piece of a much bigger push into crypto from one of the largest banks on Wall Street.

Should You Switch to MSBT or Stick with IBIT?

If you already hold IBIT, there’s no rush to switch. BlackRock’s fund has over $53 billion in assets and processes $16 to $18 billion in daily trading volume. You get better prices when you buy and sell with IBIT, and MSBT is months or years away from matching that. So for self-directed investors who trade through Schwab, Fidelity, or Robinhood, IBIT is still the better option right now.

However, if you’re a Morgan Stanley wealth management client or you’re just getting into Bitcoin for the first time, MSBT is the smarter starting point. The fee is lower, it sits inside your existing advisory relationship, and Morgan Stanley clearly isn’t treating crypto as a side project.

In fact, the fee war isn’t really what matters most here. A bank that once called Bitcoin worthless is now building an entire crypto business around it. That tells you more about where Bitcoin is heading than any fee comparison ever could.

Photo of Sam Daodu
About the Author Sam Daodu →

Sam Daodu is a crypto analyst who's spent nearly a decade making blockchain understandable—no easy task when most whitepapers read like fever dreams. He writes for 24/7 Wall St., covering Bitcoin, altcoins, and crypto market analysis for investors. Before crypto, he was a tech writer (back when explaining "the cloud" was peak innovation). Since 2018, he's written for CoinTelegraph, Yahoo Finance, The Block, Cryptonews, Zypto, Rain, and more—basically anywhere people want crypto news without the headache. Sam runs MacLabs Marketing, a content agency for crypto brands tired of sounding like AI wrote their website. He also publishes free crypto education on his site for Web3 enthusiasts who think "gas fees" is a typo. When he's not writing or staring at charts, Sam's either: - Watching anime (currently convinced One Piece has better tokenomics than most altcoins) - At the gym sculpting himself into a Greek god - Listening to the music your mum warned you only bad boys listen to Connect: LinkedIn | Email | MacLabs Marketing

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