Morgan Stanley’s MSBT ends first trading month with 0 outflows amid Bitcoin ETFs 6-week inflow streak

Morgan Stanley’s MSBT ends first trading month with 0 outflows amid Bitcoin ETFs 6-week inflow streak

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The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust completed its first month of trading without a single day of net outflows, providing an early test case for how a Wall Street bank’s brand, pricing, and distribution network can alter the competitive landscape of the digital-asset market.

The product, trading under the ticker MSBT, launched on April 8 and has since attracted about $193 million in net inflows, while managing over $240 million in assets.

Data from SoSoValue shows the fund’s inaugural month included 17 days of positive inflows and five days of flat flows, with zero daily redemptions recorded.

Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF First Month Flows
Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF First Month Flows (Source: SoSo Value)

That streak stands out amid a period of localized volatility for rival US spot Bitcoin funds. For context, the broader Bitcoin ETF category bled $422 million in combined outflows during the last two trading sessions, while MSBT successfully absorbed an additional $13 million in fresh capital.

This divergence gives Morgan Stanley a flow record that fund sponsors typically take quarters to build.

Currently, MSBT holds about 2,620 Bitcoin, ranking it 32nd among Bitcoin-holding crypto ETFs and exchanges, according to Bitcoin Treasuries data.

While it trails the largest spot funds in raw size, its resilience during market drawdowns indicates that institutional clients are treating the fund as a long-term allocation.

How Morgan Stanley’s MSBT achieved a flawless first trading month

To understand why this capital is proving so sticky, market observers are looking directly at the issuer’s pedigree, as Morgan Stanley’s primary advantage in a turbulent market is familiarity.

While crypto-native firms and dedicated asset managers pioneered the US spot Bitcoin ETF market, the bank offers investors a distinctly different entry point: a regulated financial institution with an established wealth-management and advisory base.

The bank leaned into this distinction at launch. Amy Oldenburg, Morgan Stanley’s head of digital asset strategy, noted that digital assets are increasingly intersecting with traditional markets. She emphasized the firm’s focus on helping clients navigate this shift through financial structures they already trust.

This frames MSBT as part of Morgan Stanley’s broader client-service model rather than a standalone, speculative crypto venture.

However, brand familiarity and trust are only half the equation as the firm is also weaponizing its cost structure to capture market share.

The fund charges a 0.14% sponsor fee, which the bank positioned at launch as the lowest among all spot Bitcoin ETPs. It deliberately undercuts the Grayscale Bitcoin Mini Trust at 0.15%, Bitwise at 0.20%, and BlackRock’s industry-leading iShares Bitcoin Trust at 0.25%.

While the margin appears small in percentage terms, fees become a critical battleground as Bitcoin ETFs transition from novel launch products into standard portfolio allocation tools.

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