Morgan Stanley’s new spot bitcoin fund secured more than $200 million within weeks of launch. The early demand came largely from self-directed clients rather than firm advisors. A senior executive disclosed the figures during a public event in Miami Beach, Florida.
Morgan Stanley introduced its spot Bitcoin ETF, trading under the ticker MSBT, earlier this month. The product gathered over $200 million in assets within its first weeks. The pace placed the fund ahead of many traditional ETF launches.

Amy Oldenburg, head of digital assets at Morgan Stanley, addressed the launch at Consensus in Miami. She said most early flows came from self-directed activity. “Almost all of that first week or two of activity was self-directed,” she stated.
She clarified that advisors did not lead the initial allocations. “It was not our advisors that were selling this,” Oldenburg said. She explained that clients made independent allocation decisions.
Oldenburg linked the activity to existing crypto holders. She said many spot crypto owners now seek exposure through regulated exchange-traded products. She described steady inbound interest from those reallocating assets.
She said clients increasingly hold digital assets outside traditional brokerage accounts. However, some now move portions into structured vehicles. The firm tracked that transition during the fund’s first weeks.
The $200 million figure reflects assets under management, not trading volume. The fund remains only a few weeks old. Yet it has gained traction without internal distribution pressure.
Morgan Stanley plans to support both ETF access and direct crypto ownership. The firm will add spot crypto trading to its wealth platform later this year. Oldenburg outlined that roadmap during the same discussion.
“We’ll live in a hybrid world for quite some time,” she said. She added that the bank will support both digital-native and traditional clients. The approach integrates multiple asset types within one framework.
Oldenburg said many clients hold stocks and crypto across separate systems. That structure creates operational gaps. The firm aims to consolidate visibility over time.
She also addressed tokenization efforts within the bank. “We’re not tokenizing for the sake of tokenizing,” she said. She stated that the focus remains on client value and service improvement.
The bank continues to assess faster settlement processes. It also studies tokenized financial instruments. However, Oldenburg framed these efforts as long-term developments.
“This isn’t a 2026 project or 2027 project,” she said. She described the initiative as part of a decade-long transition. The bank will continue building digital asset capabilities through that period.
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