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Morgan Stanley is moving closer to launching spot ethereum and solana exchange-traded funds (ETFs) after filing new amendments with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The Wall Street bank submitted amended S-1 registration statements on Thursday, June 18, for both products. The filings mark the second amendments for the ETH and SOL ETF applications, which were first filed in January. Staking Providers Named in Filings The amendments also revealed more details on how the funds will handle staking. Figment Inc., Galaxy Blockchain Infrastructure LLC, and Coinbase Canada Inc. are listed as staking service providers. Morgan Stanley plans to stake a portion of the ether and solana held by the funds to generate additional rewards. The filings said 5% of staking rewards would be paid to staking service providers and custodians. That feature could help differentiate the funds in a crowded ETF market. Staking allows proof-of-stake assets such as ethereum and solana to earn network rewards, though it also adds operational and regulatory complexity. For investors, the structure may offer a combination of spot price exposure and incremental yield. For issuers, staking is becoming one of the next battlegrounds in crypto ETF competition. Amendments Signal Progress Toward Launch Additional amendments often suggest active dialogue between an issuer and the SEC. They do not guarantee approval, but they usually indicate that the launch process is moving forward. Source: Eric Balchunas on X Morgan Stanley has already used pricing to gain traction in crypto ETFs. Its Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT), launched in April with the same 0.14% sponsor fee, undercutting many established spot bitcoin funds. As of June 18, MSBT had attracted $300.7 million in cumulative net inflows. The bank’s push into ethereum and solana funds shows how quickly large financial institutions are expanding beyond bitcoin. A low-fee strategy, combined with staking, could make Morgan Stanley a serious competitor as the next wave of crypto ETFs moves toward the market.

Bitcoin (BTC) investors who use steady dollar-cost averaging (DCA) may be underperforming versus strategies that adjust exposure to the market’s cycle, according to new research arguing that Bitcoin’s behavior differs from traditional long-duration assets.
In a report cited by Markus Thielen of 10x Research, Bitcoin’s market…