Morgan Stanley’s MSBT logged roughly $34 million in first-day trading volume, topping early estimates for its market debut. The fund launched with a 0.14% sponsorMorgan Stanley’s MSBT logged roughly $34 million in first-day trading volume, topping early estimates for its market debut. The fund launched with a 0.14% sponsor

Morgan Stanley’s MSBT Posts $34 Million Trading Debut as Fee War Deepens

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  • Morgan Stanley’s MSBT logged roughly $34 million in first-day trading volume, topping early estimates for its market debut.
  • The fund launched with a 0.14% sponsor fee, undercutting existing spot bitcoin ETPs on price.

Morgan Stanley’s new bitcoin ETF opened with a stronger-than-expected first trading session on Wednesday, giving the late entrant a solid start in a market that already looked crowded months ago.

According to Yahoo Finance data, the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust, trading under the ticker MSBT, saw 1,658,176 shares change hands and finished the day at $20.47 per share. That translated into roughly $34 million in first-day volume, ahead of the $30 million estimate floated by Bloomberg senior analyst Eric Balchunas.

A late entrant, but not a quiet one

That matters because MSBT is arriving well after the first wave of spot bitcoin ETFs established themselves with deep liquidity and familiar brand recognition. Late products do not usually get much room for error. If they want flows, they need either distribution strength, a pricing edge or some combination of both.

Morgan Stanley appears to be leaning heavily on price. MSBT was designed with a 0.14% sponsor fee, the lowest among bitcoin exchange-traded products to date. In a category where underlying exposure is largely the same, fee compression tends to become one of the few clean ways to stand out.

The early volume does not settle anything yet, of course. First-day activity can reflect curiosity as much as conviction. Still, it suggests the fund did not enter the market unnoticed.

Fee pressure in bitcoin ETFs is back in focus

The launch also says something broader about the current state of the bitcoin ETF race. What began as a fight for approval has turned into a fight over cost, liquidity and shelf space. New entrants are no longer selling novelty. They are selling efficiency.

For Morgan Stanley, the bigger question now is whether a strong opening session can translate into steady asset gathering. Volume is useful, but sticky assets matter more. In bitcoin ETFs, that usually depends on whether advisers, institutional allocators and brokerage channels decide a cheaper wrapper is enough reason to shift exposure from products they already know.

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