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Bitcoin has just reached a new milestone on Wall Street. With MSBT, Morgan Stanley places bitcoin at the heart of traditional wealth management finance, no longer only in the realm of already convinced investors. The signal goes beyond a simple product launch. It shows that the battle is now about access, fees, and distribution. In brief - Morgan Stanley no longer just sells access to bitcoin, it now sells its own packaging. - The reduction in fees opens a real price war on spot ETFs. - The next match will be played on flows, not announcements. A symbolic milestone for bitcoin While the investigation into the true identity of Satoshi Nakamoto continues, Morgan Stanley launched MSBT on April 8 on the NYSE Arca. This product tracks the spot price of bitcoin and features fees of 0.14%, which the bank presents as the lowest in the segment at the time of its launch. The important point lies elsewhere. Morgan Stanley officially talks about the first quoted crypto product offered by an asset manager affiliated with a U.S. bank. But, in fact, the market reads this as a new stage in the banking of bitcoin. The fee war takes a new turn The launch of MSBT puts direct pressure on already established leaders. In the provided text, BlackRock’s IBIT remains the market reference with about $55 billion in assets, but its 0.25% fees suddenly face exposure to a more aggressive offer. On spot Bitcoin ETFs, the basic promise remains almost the same from one product to another. Exposure to the price does not vary much. When products are similar, arbitrations quickly shift to three criteria: cost, liquidity, and ease of access. This is where Morgan Stanley tries to hit the mark. By cutting fees right at the start, the bank is not only trying to attract flows. It forces the whole sector to defend its margins in a market that still seemed dominated by BlackRock’s scale effect. The advantage Morgan Stanley wants to monetize Morgan Stanley’s real lever may not be its price. It is its network. The provided text reminds us that its wealth management division oversees more than $6 trillion in client assets and relies on thousands of financial advisors. This firepower changes the nature of the competition. Until now, bitcoin ETFs have mainly attracted self-directed investors already familiar with the market. With Morgan Stanley, bitcoin can more easily enter allocations offered through internal platforms and validated by advisors. In other words, the issue is no longer just about “buying bitcoin.” It is about “who controls the entry point.” And in this arena, a large bank has a discreet but formidable advantage: the existing client relationship. What the market needs to watch now BlackRock does not lose its lead overnight. IBIT maintains enormous weight, deep liquidity, and a market infrastructure already well established. For institutional and active traders, this advantage remains central. On the other hand, the launch of MSBT could shift the market’s center of gravity. If initial volumes and flows hold, the pioneers’ dominance could begin to erode, not on the grounds of notoriety, but on that of regulated distribution. Finally, the most interesting aspect is what this move announces for the future. Morgan Stanley has already linked this launch to a broader strategy on digital assets, with custody infrastructure ensured by Coinbase and BNY, and a clearly oriented discourse toward deeper integration of digital assets into traditional finance. In this context, bitcoin ceases a little more to be a peripheral asset. It becomes a product that large firms now want to mine, distribute, and control.
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