Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF Hits $103M in Six Days, Passes WisdomTree
Darius Baruo
Apr 16, 2026 07:29
Morgan Stanley’s MSBT fund surpassed WisdomTree’s two-year-old Bitcoin ETF in total net flows after just six trading days, signaling fierce competition.
Morgan Stanley’s spot Bitcoin ETF just accomplished in six trading days what took WisdomTree over two years. The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT) pulled in $19.3 million on Wednesday, pushing its total net inflows to $103 million and leapfrogging WisdomTree’s Bitcoin Fund, which has accumulated $86 million since its January 2024 launch.
The speed of MSBT’s ascent underscores how brand recognition and aggressive pricing can reshape competitive dynamics in the increasingly crowded Bitcoin ETF market.
Low Fees, Big Name, Fast Money
Morgan Stanley launched MSBT on April 8 with a 0.14% expense ratio—one basis point cheaper than Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust and among the lowest in the space. That pricing, combined with Morgan Stanley’s massive wealth management distribution network, appears to be paying off.
The fund has posted inflows every single trading day since launch. Wednesday’s $19.3 million marked the sixth consecutive positive session, according to Farside Investors data.
Still, MSBT remains a small player compared to the market leaders. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) dominates with $64.3 billion in net inflows, while Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund sits at $10.9 billion. The gap between second place and the rest is enormous.
More Heavyweights Entering the Ring
The institutional pile-in continues. Goldman Sachs, which spent years dismissing crypto, filed with the SEC on Tuesday to launch its own Bitcoin-linked ETF using an options strategy. The move signals that Wall Street’s remaining holdouts are capitulating to client demand.
If MSBT maintains its current pace, it could soon overtake several mid-tier competitors. Invesco Galaxy Bitcoin ETF holds $245 million in net flows, Valkyrie sits at $326 million, and Franklin’s Bitcoin ETF has $375 million. At roughly $17 million per day average, Morgan Stanley could pass all three within weeks.
ETF Survival Gets Harder
The flip side of this institutional rush? Many funds won’t survive. A Bloomberg report from April 2 found the average ETF lifespan collapsed from 4.66 years in 2024 to 3.5 years in 2025. Over 40 ETFs were liquidated in just the first two months of 2026, with an average age of only 21 months at death.
Bloomberg analyst James Seyffart predicted in December that many crypto exchange-traded products would be liquidated by end of 2027 due to insufficient demand. With over 126 ETP applications pending at the SEC when he made that call, the math suggests most won’t achieve the scale needed to survive.
For now, Morgan Stanley’s rapid accumulation suggests it won’t be among the casualties. But in a market where BlackRock controls the lion’s share of flows, even $103 million in six days might not guarantee long-term viability.
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