Key Takeaways:
Morgan Stanley has taken its most decisive step yet into digital assets, filing for both a Bitcoin ETF and a Solana ETF in what marks its first direct push into crypto investment products.
The filing positions one of Wall Street’s most powerful banks at the center of the rapidly expanding crypto ETF market, intensifying competition among financial giants racing to capture institutional demand.
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Morgan Stanley submitted registration documents to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for two new exchange-traded funds: one tracking Bitcoin and the other tied to Solana.
It is the first bank to take a step to issue its own crypto ETFs, making the transition into a distributor of third-party crypto products to an issuer. It indicates the increasing confidence within large financial institutions that digital assets are no longer on the periphery but a key constituent of contemporary portfolios.
The funds proposed will be passive vehicles i.e. they will follow the spot price of underlying assets without leverage, derivatives or active trading programs. In case granted, they would be traded in the public markets, providing investors with an exposure to Bitcoin and Solana, via conventional brokerage accounts.
The first choice is obviously Bitcoin. It is the oldest digital asset, since it has multiple spot ETFs globally with tens of billions of dollars under management. The adoption process by institutions has been faster as regulatory clarity intensifies and massive asset managers institutionalize Bitcoin positions. Solana, however, is the more strategic and aggressive choice.
Solana has become the dominant chain for high-speed trading, memecoins, consumer apps, and DeFi activity. Its ecosystem now handles a significant share of on-chain volume, and it has positioned itself as a serious competitor to Ethereum in user growth and developer activity.
By filing for a Solana ETF alongside Bitcoin, Morgan Stanley is not just chasing safe demand. It is signaling belief in next-generation blockchains and the infrastructure layer of crypto, not only digital gold. By doing this, the bank exposes itself to the store-of-value narrative as well as the high-growth application layer of Web3.
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Over the years, large American financial institutions have resisted the creation of crypto products directly as a result of regulatory uncertainty and compliance risk. That position is changing rapidly.
The legal risk to the traditional institutions has been minimized by the changes in the U.S policy, such as the explicit guidance provided by regulators and legislative changes being enacted in relation to the digital assets. Cryptocurrencies are no longer considered to be a threat to the reputation of banks. They are using it as a competitive platform.
In the past, the banks restricted their crypto exposure to custody services and back-end infrastructure. They are currently entering product design, allocation and revenue accumulation. Morgan Stanley can by launching its own ETFs:
This is a strategic pivot. It shows that crypto is no longer an experiment inside big banks. It is becoming a revenue line.
Other institutions are making similar moves. Bank of America has expanded crypto ETF access. Vanguard has enabled crypto ETF trading. BlackRock and Fidelity already dominate Bitcoin ETF flows. Morgan Stanley’s entry raises the pressure across Wall Street.
Morgan Stanley serves millions of clients globally through its wealth management division. Even a small allocation shift into Bitcoin or Solana through these ETFs could translate into billions of dollars in new demand.
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