Morgan Stanley is moving further into digital-asset infrastructure, this time not through trading access, but through the plumbing behind stablecoins.
The firm’s asset-management arm has launched the MSILF Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio, listed under the ticker MSNXX, as part of the Morgan Stanley Institutional Liquidity Funds trust. The product is designed to serve payment stablecoin issuers looking for a compliant place to park reserves, with the fund explicitly framed around the investment standards laid out by the GENIUS Act.
That matters because the stablecoin market is no longer only about issuance and circulation. The question of where reserves sit, how liquid they are, and what they are invested in has become central to how these products are judged by regulators and institutions alike.
Morgan Stanley’s new fund is meant to answer that question with a fairly conservative structure. According to the announcement, it invests in cash, U.S. Treasury bills, notes and bonds with maturities of 93 days or less, and certain overnight repurchase agreements. The objective is to preserve capital, maintain daily liquidity and generate current income, while keeping a stable $1 net asset value.
In practical terms, it gives issuers such as Tether, Circle and World Liberty Financial a vehicle built specifically for reserve management rather than forcing them to assemble that exposure in a more bespoke way.
The launch also says something broader about where the market is heading. A few years ago, the main question was whether stablecoins would survive regulatory pressure. Now the question is increasingly how large financial firms will build products around them.
Fred McMullen, co-head of global liquidity at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, said the growth in stablecoin issuers and in the amount of assets held in stablecoins points to a part of the market that is still expanding.
That seems to be the bet here. Morgan Stanley is not launching a stablecoin of its own. It is building for the balance-sheet side of the business, where the real institutional opportunity may end up sitting.
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